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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Canadian Dominion, by Oscar D. Skelton
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Canadian Dominion, by Oscar D. Skelton
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Canadian Dominion
+ A Chronicle of our Northern Neighbor
+
+Author: Oscar D. Skelton
+
+Release Date: December 11, 2008 [EBook #2835]
+Last Updated: February 6, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CANADIAN DOMINION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The James J. Kelly Library Of St. Gregory's
+University; Alev Akman, Dianne Bean, Joe Buersmeyer, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE CANADIAN DOMINION
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ A CHRONICLE OF OUR NORTHERN NEIGHBOR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ By Oscar D. Skelton
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NEW HAVEN: YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
+ TORONTO: GLASGOW, BROOK &amp; CO.
+ LONDON: HUMPHREY MILFORD
+ OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
+ 1919
+ Copyright, 1919, by Yale University Press
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The history of Canada since the close of the French regime falls into
+ three clearly marked half centuries. The first fifty years after the Peace
+ of Paris determined that Canada was to maintain a separate existence under
+ the British flag and was not to become a fourteenth colony or be merged
+ with the United States. The second fifty years brought the winning of
+ self-government and the achievement of Confederation. The third fifty
+ years witnessed the expansion of the Dominion from sea to sea and the
+ endeavor to make the unity of the political map a living reality&mdash;the
+ endeavor to weld the far-flung provinces into one country, to give Canada
+ a distinctive place in the Empire and in the world, and eventually in the
+ alliance of peoples banded together in mankind's greatest task of
+ enforcing peace and justice among nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author has found it expedient in this narrative to depart from the
+ usual method of these Chronicles and arrange the matter in chronological
+ rather than in biographical or topical divisions. The first period of
+ fifty years is accordingly covered in one chapter, the second in two
+ chapters, and the third in two chapters. Authorities and a list of
+ publications for a more extended study will be found in the
+ Bibliographical Note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O. D. S.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY, KINGSTON, CANADA, July, 1919.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Contents
+ </h3>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>THE CANADIAN DOMINION</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. THE FIRST FIFTY YEARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. THE FIGHT FOR SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. THE UNION ERA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. THE DAYS OF TRIAL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. THE YEARS OF FULFILMENT </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE CANADIAN DOMINION
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. THE FIRST FIFTY YEARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely more than half a century has passed since the Dominion of Canada,
+ in its present form, came into existence. But thrice that period has
+ elapsed since the fateful day when Montcalm and Wolfe laid down their
+ lives in battle on the Plains of Abraham, and the lands which now comprise
+ the Dominion finally passed from French hands and came under British rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Peace of Paris, which brought the Seven Years' War to a close in 1763,
+ marked the termination of the empire of France in the New World. Over the
+ continent of North America, after that peace, only two flags floated, the
+ red and yellow banner of Spain and the Union Jack of Great Britain. Of
+ these the Union Jack held sway over by far the larger domain&mdash;over
+ the vague territories about Hudson Bay, over the great valley of the St.
+ Lawrence, and over all the lands lying east of the Mississippi, save only
+ New Orleans. To whom it would fall to develop this vast claim, what mighty
+ empires would be carved out of the wilderness, where the boundary lines
+ would run between the nations yet to be, were secrets the future held. Yet
+ in retrospect it is now clear that in solving these questions the Peace of
+ Paris played no inconsiderable part. By removing from the American
+ colonies the menace of French aggression from the north it relieved them
+ of a sense of dependence on the mother country and so made possible the
+ birth of a new nation in the United States. At the same time, in the
+ northern half of the continent, it made possible that other experiment in
+ democracy, in the union of diverse races, in international neighborliness,
+ and in the reconciliation of empire with liberty, which Canada presents to
+ the whole world, and especially to her elder sister in freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1763 the territories which later were to make up the Dominion of Canada
+ were divided roughly into three parts. These parts had little or nothing
+ in common. They shared together neither traditions of suffering or glory
+ nor ties of blood or trade. Acadia, or Nova Scotia, by the Atlantic, was
+ an old French colony, now British for over a generation. Canada, or
+ Quebec, on the St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes, with seventy thousand
+ French habitants and a few hundred English camp followers, had just passed
+ under the British flag. West and north lay the vaguely outlined domains of
+ the Hudson's Bay Company, where the red man and the buffalo still reigned
+ supreme and almost unchallenged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old colony of Acadia, save only the island outliers, Cape Breton and
+ Prince Edward Island, now ceded by the Peace of Paris, had been in British
+ hands since 1713. It was not, however, until 1749 that any concerted
+ effort had been made at a settlement of this region. The menace from the
+ mighty fortress which the French were rebuilding at that time at
+ Louisbourg, in Cape Breton, and the hostility of the restless Acadians or
+ old French settlers on the mainland, had compelled action and the British
+ Government departed from its usual policy of laissez faire in matters of
+ emigration. Twenty-five hundred English settlers were brought out to found
+ and hold the town and fort of Halifax. Nearly as many Germans were planted
+ in Lunenburg, where their descendants flourish to this day. Then the
+ hapless Acadians were driven into exile and into the room they left, New
+ Englanders of strictest Puritan ancestry came, on their own initiative,
+ and built up new communities like those of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and
+ Rhode Island. Other waves of voluntary immigration followed&mdash;Ulster
+ Presbyterians, driven out by the attempt of England to crush the Irish
+ woolen manufacture, and, still later, Highlanders, Roman Catholic and
+ Presbyterian, who soon made Gaelic the prevailing tongue of the
+ easternmost counties. By 1767 the colony of Nova Scotia, which then
+ included all Acadia, north and east of Maine, had a prosperous population
+ of some seven thousand Americans, two thousand Irish, two thousand
+ Germans, barely a thousand English, and well over a thousand surviving
+ Acadian French. In short, this northernmost of the Atlantic colonies
+ appeared to be fast on the way to become a part of New England. It was
+ chiefly New Englanders who had peopled it, and it was with New England
+ that for many a year its whole social and commercial intercourse was
+ carried on. It was no accident that Nova Scotia later produced the first
+ Yankee humorist, "Sam Slick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the future sister province of Canada, or Quebec, which lay along the
+ St. Lawrence as far as the Great Lakes, Acadia or Nova Scotia had much
+ less in common than with New England. Hundreds of miles of unbroken forest
+ wilderness lay between the two colonies, and the sea lanes ran between the
+ St. Lawrence, the Bay of Fundy, or Halifax and Havre or Plymouth, and not
+ between Quebec and Halifax. Even the French settlers came of different
+ stocks. The Acadians were chiefly men of La Rochelle and the Loire, while
+ the Canadians came, for the most part, from the coast provinces stretching
+ from Normandy and Picardy to Poitou and Bordeaux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation in Canada proper presented the British authorities with a
+ problem new in their imperial experience. Hitherto, save for Acadia and
+ New Netherland, where the settlers were few in numbers and, even in New
+ Netherland, closely akin to the conquerors in race, religion, and speech,
+ no colony containing men of European stocks had been acquired by conquest.
+ Canada held some sixty or seventy thousand settlers, French and Catholic
+ almost to a man. Despite the inefficiency of French colonial methods the
+ plantation had taken firm root. The colony had developed a strength, a
+ social structure, and an individuality all its own. Along the St. Lawrence
+ and the Richelieu the settlements lay close and compact; the habitants'
+ whitewashed cottages lined the river banks only a few arpents apart. The
+ social cohesion of the colony was equally marked. Alike in government, in
+ religion, and in industry, it was a land where authority was strong.
+ Governor and intendant, feudal seigneur, bishop and Jesuit superior, ruled
+ each in his own sphere and provided a rigid mold and framework for the
+ growth of the colony. There were, it is true, limits to the reach of the
+ arm of authority. Beyond Montreal stretched a vast wilderness merging at
+ some uncertain point into the other wilderness that was Louisiana. Along
+ the waterways which threaded this great No Man's Land the coureurs-de-bois
+ roamed with little heed to law or license, glad to escape from the
+ paternal strictness that irked youth on the lower St. Lawrence. But the
+ liberty of these rovers of the forest was not liberty after the English
+ pattern; the coureur-de-bois was of an entirely different type from the
+ pioneers of British stock who were even then pushing their way through the
+ gaps in the Alleghanies and making homes in the backwoods. Priest and
+ seigneur, habitant and coureur-de-bois were one and all difficult to fit
+ into accepted English ways. Clearly Canada promised to strain the
+ digestive capacity of the British lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The present western provinces of the Dominion were still the haunt of
+ Indian and buffalo. French-Canadian explorers and fur traders, it is true,
+ had penetrated to the Rockies a few years before the Conquest, and had
+ built forts on Lake Winnipeg, on the Assiniboine and Red rivers, and at
+ half a dozen portages on the Saskatchewan. But the "Company of Adventurers
+ of England trading into Hudson's Bay" had not yet ventured inland, still
+ content to carry on its trade with the Indians from its forts along the
+ shores of that great sea. On the Pacific the Russians had coasted as far
+ south as Mount Saint Elias, but no white man, so far as is known, had set
+ foot on the shores of what is now British Columbia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two immediate problems were bequeathed to the British Government by the
+ Treaty of Paris: what was to be done with the unsettled lands between the
+ Alleghanies and the Mississippi; and how were the seventy thousand French
+ subjects in the valley of the St. Lawrence to be dealt with? The first
+ difficulty was not solved. It was merely postponed. The whole back country
+ of the English colonies was proclaimed an Indian reserve where the King's
+ white subjects might trade but might not acquire land. This policy was not
+ devised in order to set bounds to the expansion of the older colonies;
+ that was an afterthought. The policy had its root in an honest desire to
+ protect the Indians from the frauds of unscrupulous traders and from the
+ encroachments of settlers on their hunting grounds. The need of a
+ conciliatory, if firm, policy in regard to the great interior was made
+ evident by the Pontiac rising in 1763, the aftermath of the defeat of the
+ French, who had done all they could to inspire the Indians with hatred for
+ the advancing English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How to deal with Canada was a more thorny problem. The colony had not been
+ sought by its conquerors for itself. It was counted of little worth. The
+ verdict of its late possessors, as recorded in Voltaire's light farewell
+ to "a few arpents of snow," might be discounted as an instance of sour
+ grapes; but the estimate of its new possessors was evidently little
+ higher, since they debated long and dubiously whether in the peace
+ settlement they should retain Canada or the little sugar island of
+ Guadeloupe, a mere pin point on the map. Canada had been conquered not for
+ the good it might bring but for the harm it was doing as a base for French
+ attack upon the English colonies&mdash;"the wasps' nest must be smoked
+ out." But once it had been taken, it had to be dealt with for itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy first adopted was a simple one, natural enough for
+ eighteenth-century Englishmen. They decided to make Canada* over in the
+ image of the old colonies, to turn the "new subjects," as they were
+ called, in good time into Englishmen and Protestants. A generation or two
+ would suffice, in the phrase of Francis Maseres&mdash;himself a descendant
+ of a Huguenot refugee but now wholly an Englishman&mdash;for "melting down
+ the French nation into the English in point of language, affections,
+ religion, and laws." Immigration was to be encouraged from Britain and
+ from the other American colonies, which, in the view of the Lords of
+ Trade, were already overstocked and in danger of being forced by the
+ scarcity or monopoly of land to take up manufactures which would compete
+ with English wares. And since it would greatly contribute to speedy
+ settlement, so the Royal Proclamation of 1763 declared, that the King's
+ subjects should be informed of his paternal care for the security of their
+ liberties and properties, it was promised that, as soon as circumstances
+ would permit, a General Assembly would be summoned, as in the older
+ colonies. The laws of England, civil and criminal, as near as might be,
+ were to prevail. The Roman Catholic subjects were to be free to profess
+ their own religion, "so far as the laws of Great Britain permit," but they
+ were to be shown a better way. To the first Governor instructions were
+ issued "that all possible Encouragement shall be given to the erecting
+ Protestant Schools in the said Districts, Townships and Precincts, by
+ settling and appointing and allotting proper Quantities of Land for that
+ Purpose and also for a Glebe and Maintenance for a Protestant minister and
+ Protestant schoolmasters." Thus in the fullness of time, like Acadia, but
+ without any Evangelise of Grand Pre, without any drastic policy of
+ expulsion, impossible with seventy thousand people scattered over a wide
+ area, even Canada would become a good English land, a newer New England.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Royal Proclamation of 1763 set the bounds of the new
+ colony. They were surprisingly narrow, a mere strip along
+ both sides of the St. Lawrence from a short distance beyond
+ the Ottawa on the west, to the end of the Gasps peninsula on
+ the east. The land to the northeast was put under the
+ jurisdiction of the Governor of Newfoundland, and the Great
+ Lakes region was included in the territory reserved for the
+ Indians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is questionable whether this policy could ever have achieved success
+ even if it had been followed for generations without rest or turning. But
+ it was not destined to be given a long trial. From the very beginning the
+ men on the spot, the soldier Governors of Canada, urged an entirely
+ contrary policy on the Home Government, and the pressure of events soon
+ brought His Majesty's Ministers to concur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the first civil Governor of Canada, the British authorities chose
+ General Murray, one of Wolfe's ablest lieutenants, who since 1760 had
+ served as military Governor of the Quebec district. He was to be aided in
+ his task by a council composed of the Lieutenant Governors of Montreal and
+ Three Rivers, the Chief Justice, the head of the customs, and eight
+ citizens to be named by the Governor from "the most considerable of the
+ persons of property" in the province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new Governor was a blunt, soldierly man, upright and just according to
+ his lights, but deeply influenced by his military and aristocratic
+ leanings. Statesmen thousands of miles away might plan to encourage
+ English settlers and English political ways and to put down all that was
+ French. To the man on the spot English settlers meant "the four hundred
+ and fifty contemptible sutlers and traders" who had come in the wake of
+ the army from New England and New York, with no proper respect for their
+ betters, and vulgarly and annoyingly insistent upon what they claimed to
+ be their rights. The French might be alien in speech and creed, but at
+ least the seigneurs and the higher clergy were gentlemen, with a due
+ respect for authority, the King's and their own, and the habitants were
+ docile, the best of soldier stuff. "Little, very little," Murray wrote in
+ 1764 to the Lords of Trade, "will content the New Subjects, but nothing
+ will satisfy the Licentious Fanaticks Trading here, but the expulsion of
+ the Canadians, who are perhaps the bravest and best race upon the Globe, a
+ Race, who cou'd they be indulged with a few priviledges wch the Laws of
+ England deny to Roman Catholicks at home, wou'd soon get the better of
+ every National Antipathy to their Conquerors and become the most faithful
+ and most useful set of Men in this American Empire."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This quotation and those following in this chapter are
+ from official documents most conveniently assembled in Shorn
+ and Doughty, "Documents relating to the Constitutional
+ History of Canada, 1759-1791", and Doughty and McArthur,
+ "Documents relating to the Constitutional History of Canada,
+ 1791-1818".
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Certainly there was much in the immediate situation to justify Murray's
+ attitude. It was preposterous to set up a legislature in which only the
+ four hundred Protestants might sit and from which the seventy thousand
+ Catholics would be barred. It would have been difficult in any case to
+ change suddenly the system of laws governing the most intimate
+ transactions of everyday life. But when, as happened, the Administration
+ was entrusted in large part to newly created justices of the peace, men
+ with "little French and less honour," "to whom it is only possible to
+ speak with guineas in one's hand," the change became flatly impossible.
+ Such an alteration, if still insisted upon, must come more slowly than the
+ impatient traders in Montreal and Quebec desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Government, however, was not yet ready to abandon its policy.
+ The Quebec traders petitioned for Murray's recall, alleging that the
+ measures required to encourage settlement had not been adopted, that the
+ Governor was encouraging factions by his partiality to the French, that he
+ treated the traders with "a Rage and Rudeness of Language and Demeanor"
+ and&mdash;a fair thrust in return for his reference to them as "the most
+ immoral collection of men I ever knew"&mdash;as "discountenancing the
+ Protestant Religion by almost a Total Neglect of Attendance upon the
+ Service of the Church." When the London business correspondents of the
+ traders backed up this petition, the Government gave heed. In 1766 Murray
+ was recalled to England and, though he was acquitted of the charges
+ against him, he did not return to his post in Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The triumph of the English merchants was short. They had jumped from the
+ frying pan into the fire. General Guy Carleton, Murray's successor and
+ brother officer under Wolfe, was an even abler man, and he was still less
+ in sympathy with democracy of the New England pattern. Moreover, a new
+ factor had come in to reenforce the soldier's instinctive preference for
+ gentlemen over shopkeepers. The first rumblings of the American Revolution
+ had reached Quebec. It was no time, in Carleton's view, to set up another
+ sucking republic. Rather, he believed, the utmost should be made of the
+ opportunity Canada afforded as a barrier against the advance of democracy,
+ a curb upon colonial insolence. The need of cultivating the new subjects
+ was the greater, Carleton contended, because the plan of settlement by
+ Englishmen gave no sign of succeeding: "barring a Catastrophe shocking to
+ think of, this Country must, to the end of Time, be peopled by the
+ Canadian race."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To bind the Canadians firmly to England, Carleton proposed to work chiefly
+ through their old leaders, the seigneurs and the clergy. He would restore
+ to the people their old system of laws, both civil and criminal. He would
+ confirm the seigneurs in their feudal dues and fines, which the habitants
+ were growing slack in paying now that the old penalties were not enforced,
+ and he would give them honors and emoluments such as they had before
+ enjoyed as officers in regular or militia regiments. The Roman Catholic
+ clergy were already, in fact, confirmed in their right to tithe and toll;
+ and, without objection from the Governor, Bishop Briand, elected by the
+ chapter in Quebec and consecrated in Paris, once more assumed control over
+ the flock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton's proposals did not pass unquestioned. His own chief legal
+ adviser, Francis Maseres, was a sturdy adherent of the older policy,
+ though he agreed that the time was not yet ripe for setting up an Assembly
+ and suggested some well-considered compromise between the old laws and the
+ new. The Advocate General of England, James Marriott, urged the same
+ course. The policy of 1768, he contended eleven years later, had already
+ succeeded in great measure. The assimilation of government had been
+ effected; an assimilation of manners would follow. The excessive military
+ spirit of the inhabitants had begun to dwindle, as England's interest
+ required. The back settlements of New York and Canada were fast being
+ joined. Two or three thousand men of British stock, many of them men of
+ substance, had gone to the new colony; warehouses and foundries were being
+ built; and many of the principal seigneuries had passed into English
+ hands. All that was needed, he concluded, was persistence along the old
+ path. The same view was of course strenuously urged by the English
+ merchants in the colony, who continued to demand, down to the very eve of
+ the Revolution, an elective Assembly and other rights of freeborn Britons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton carried the day. His advice, tendered at close range during four
+ years' absentee residence in London, from 1770 to 1774, fell in with the
+ mood of Lord North's Government. The measure in which the new policy was
+ embodied, the famous Quebec Act of 1774, was essentially a part of the
+ ministerial programme for strengthening British power to cope with the
+ resistance then rising to rebellious heights in the old colonies. Though
+ not, as was long believed, designed in retaliation for the Boston
+ disturbances, it is clear that its framers had Massachusetts in mind when
+ deciding on their policy for Quebec. The main purpose of the Act, the
+ motive which turned the scale against the old Anglicizing policy, was to
+ attach the leaders of French-Canadian opinion firmly to the British Crown,
+ and thus not only to prevent Canada itself from becoming infected with
+ democratic contagion or turning in a crisis toward France, but to ensure,
+ if the worst came to the worst, a military base in that northland whose
+ terrors had in old days kept the seaboard colonies circumspectly loyal.
+ Ministers in London had been driven by events to accept Carleton's
+ paradox, that to make Quebec British, it must be prevented from becoming
+ English. If in later years the solidarity and aloofness of the
+ French-Canadian people were sometimes to prove inconvenient to British
+ interests, it was always to be remembered that this situation was due in
+ great part to the deliberate action of Great Britain in strengthening
+ French-Canadian institutions as a means of advancing what she considered
+ her own interests in America. "The views of the British Government in
+ respect to the political uses to which it means to make Canada
+ subservient," Marriott had truly declared, "must direct the spirit of any
+ code of laws."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Quebec Act multiplied the area of the colony sevenfold by the
+ restoration of all Labrador on the east and the region west as far as the
+ Ohio and the Mississippi and north to the Hudson's Bay Company's
+ territory. It restored the old French civil law but continued the milder
+ English criminal law already in operation. It gave to the Roman Catholic
+ inhabitants the free exercise of their religion, subject to a modified
+ oath of allegiance, and confirmed the clergy in their right "to hold,
+ receive and enjoy their accustomed dues and rights, with respect to such
+ persons only as shall confess the said religion." The promised elective
+ Assembly was not granted, but a Council appointed by the Crown received a
+ measure of legislative power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his return to Canada in September, 1774, Carleton reported that the
+ Canadians had "testified the strongest marks of Joy and Gratitude and
+ Fidelity to their King and to His Government for the late Arrangements
+ made at Home in their Favor." The "most respectable part of the English,"
+ he continued, urged peaceful acceptance of the new order. Evidently,
+ however, the respectable members of society were few, as the great body of
+ the English settlers joined in a petition for the repeal of the Act on the
+ ground that it deprived them of the incalculable benefits of habeas corpus
+ and trial by jury. The Montreal merchants, whether, as Carleton commented,
+ they "were of a more turbulent Turn, or that they caught the Fire from
+ some Colonists settled among them," were particularly outspoken in the
+ town meetings they held. In the older colonies the opposition was still
+ more emphatic. An Act which hemmed them in to the seacoast, established on
+ the American continent a Church they feared and hated, and continued an
+ autocratic political system, appeared to many to be the undoing of the
+ work of Pitt and Wolfe and the revival on the banks of the St. Lawrence
+ and the Mississippi of a serious menace to their liberty and progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the clash at Lexington, and the War of American Independence had
+ begun. The causes, the course, and the ending of that great civil war have
+ been treated elsewhere in this series.* Here it is necessary only to note
+ its bearings on the fate of Canada.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Eve of the Revolution" and "Washington and His
+ Comrades in Arms" (in "The Chronicles of America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Early in 1775 the Continental Congress undertook the conquest of Canada,
+ or, as it was more diplomatically phrased, the relief of its inhabitants
+ from British tyranny. Richard Montgomery led an expedition over the old
+ route by Lake Champlain and the Richelieu, along which French and Indian
+ raiding parties used to pass years before, and Benedict Arnold made a
+ daring and difficult march up the Kennebec and down the Chaudiere to
+ Quebec. Montreal fell to Montgomery; and Carleton himself escaped capture
+ only by the audacity of some French-Canadian voyageurs, who, under cover
+ of darkness, rowed his whaleboat or paddled it with their hands silently
+ past the American sentinels on the shore. Once down the river and in
+ Quebec, Carleton threw himself with vigor and skill into the defense of
+ his capital. His generalship and the natural strength of the position
+ proved more than a match for Montgomery and Arnold. Montgomery was killed
+ and Arnold wounded in a vain attempt to carry the city by storm on the
+ last night of 1775. At Montreal a delegation from Congress, composed of
+ Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Chase, and Charles Carroll of Carrollton,
+ accompanied by Carroll's brother, a Jesuit priest and a future archbishop,
+ failed to achieve-more by diplomacy than their generals had done by the
+ sword. The Canadians seemed, content enough to wear the British yoke. In
+ the spring, when a British fleet arrived with reenforcements, the American
+ troops retired in haste and, before the Declaration of Independence had
+ been proclaimed, Canada was free from the last of its ten thousand
+ invaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expedition had put Carleton's policy to the test. On the whole it
+ stood the strain. The seigneurs had rallied to the Government which had
+ restored their rights, and the clergy had called on the people to stand
+ fast by the King. So far all went as Carleton had hoped: "The Noblesse,
+ Clergy, and greater part of the Bourgeoisie," he wrote, "have given
+ Government every Assistance in their Power." But the habitants refused to
+ follow their appointed leaders with the old docility, and some even mobbed
+ the seigneurs who tried to enroll them. Ten years of freedom had worked a
+ democratic change in them, and they were much less enthusiastic than their
+ betters about the restoration of seigneurial privileges. Carleton, like
+ many another, had held as public opinion what were merely the opinions of
+ those whom he met at dinner. "These people had been governed with too
+ loose a rein for many years," he now wrote to Burgoyne, "and had imbibed
+ too much of the American Spirit of Licentiousness and Independence
+ administered by a numerous and turbulent Faction here, to be suddenly
+ restored to a proper and desirable Subordination." A few of the habitants
+ joined his forces; fewer joined the invaders or sold them supplies&mdash;till
+ they grew suspicious of paper "Continentals." But the majority held
+ passively aloof. Even when France joined the warring colonies and Admiral
+ d'Estaing appealed to the Canadians to rise, they did not heed; though it
+ is difficult to say what the result would have been if Washington had
+ agreed to Lafayette's plan of a joint French and American invasion in
+ 1778.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nova Scotia also held aloof, in spite of the fact that many of the men who
+ had come from New England and from Ulster were eager to join the colonies
+ to the south. In Nova Scotia democracy was a less hardy plant than in
+ Massachusetts. The town and township institutions, which had been the
+ nurseries of resistance in New England, had not been allowed to take root
+ there. The circumstances of the founding of Halifax had given ripe to a
+ greater tendency, which lasted long, to lean upon the mother country. The
+ Maine wilderness made intercourse between Nova Scotia and New England
+ difficult by land, and the British fleet was in control of the sea until
+ near the close of the war. Nova Scotia stood by Great Britain, and was
+ reserved to become part of a northern nation still in the making.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That nation was to owe its separate existence to the success of the
+ American Revolution. But for that event, coming when it did, the
+ struggling colonies of Quebec and Nova Scotia would in time have become
+ merged with the colonies to the youth and would have followed them,
+ whether they remained within the British Empire or not. Thus it was due to
+ the quarrel between the thirteen colonies and the motherland that Canada
+ did not become merely a fourteenth colony or state. Nor was this the only
+ bearing of the Revolution on Canada's destiny. Thanks to the coming of the
+ Loyalists, those exiles of the Revolution who settled in Canada in large
+ numbers, Canada was after all to be dominantly a land of English speech
+ and of English sympathies. By one of the many paradoxes which mark the
+ history of Canada, the very success of the plan which aimed to save
+ British power by confirming French-Canadian nationality and the loyalty of
+ the French led in the end to making a large part of Canada English. The
+ Revolution meant also that for many a year those in authority in England
+ and in Canada itself were to stand in fear of the principles and
+ institutions which had led the old colonies to rebellion and separation,
+ and were to try to build up in Canada buttresses against the advance of
+ democracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British statesmen who helped to frame the Peace of 1783 were men with
+ broad and generous views as to the future of the seceding colonies and
+ their relations with the mother country. It was perhaps inevitable that
+ they should have given less thought to the future of the colonies in
+ America which remained under the British flag. Few men could realize at
+ the moment that out of these scattered fragments a new nation and a second
+ empire would arise. Not only were the seceding colonies given a share in
+ the fishing grounds of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia, which was
+ unfortunately to prove a constant source of friction, but the boundary
+ line was drawn with no thought of the need of broad and easy communication
+ between Nova Scotia and Canada, much less between Canada and the far West.
+ Vague definitions of the boundaries, naturally incident to the prevailing
+ lack of geographical knowledge of the vast continent, held further seeds
+ of trouble. These contentions, however, were far in the future. At the
+ moment another defect of the treaty proved to be Canada's gain. The
+ failure of Lord Shelburne's Ministry to insist upon effective safeguards
+ for the fair treatment of those who had taken the King's side in the old
+ colonies, condemned as it was not only by North and the Tories but by Fox
+ and Sheridan and Burke, led to that Loyalist migration which changed the
+ racial complexion of Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Treaty of 1783 provided that Congress would "earnestly recommend" to
+ the various States that the Loyalists be granted amnesty and restitution.
+ This pious resolution proved not worth the paper on which it was written.
+ In State after State the property of the Loyalists was withheld or
+ confiscated anew. Yet this ungenerous treatment of the defeated by the
+ victors is not hard to understand. The struggle had been waged with all
+ the bitterness of civil war. The smallness of the field of combat had
+ intensified personal ill-will. Both sides had practiced cruelties in
+ guerrilla warfare; but the Patriots forgot Marion's raids, Simsbury mines,
+ and the drumhead hangings, and remembered only Hessian brutalities, Indian
+ scalpings, Tarleton's harryings, and the infamous prison ships of New
+ York. The war had been a long one. The tide of battle had ebbed and
+ flowed. A district that was Patriot one year was frequently Loyalist the
+ next. These circumstances engendered fear and suspicion and led to nervous
+ reprisals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At least a third, if not a half, of the people of the old colonies had
+ been opposed to revolution. New York was strongly Loyalist, with
+ Pennsylvania, Georgia, and the Carolinas closely following. In the end
+ some fifty or sixty thousand Loyalists abandoned their homes or suffered
+ expulsion rather than submit to the new order. They counted in their ranks
+ many of the men who had held first place in their old communities, men of
+ wealth, of education, and of standing, as well as thousands who had
+ nothing to give but their fidelity to the old order. Many, especially of
+ the well-to-do, went to England; a few found refuge in the West Indies;
+ but the great majority, over fifty thousand in all, sought new homes in
+ the northern wilderness. Over thirty thousand, including many of the most
+ influential of the whole number (with about three thousand negro slaves,
+ afterwards freed and deported to Sierra Leone) were carried by ship to
+ Nova Scotia. They found homes chiefly in that part of the province which
+ in 1784 became New Brunswick. Others, trekking overland or sailing around
+ by the Gulf and up the River, settled in the upper valley of the St.
+ Lawrence&mdash;on Lake St. Francis, on the Cataraqui and the Bay of
+ Quinte, and in the Niagara District.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though these pioneers were generously aided by the British Government with
+ grants of land and supplies, their hardships and disappointments during
+ the first years in the wilderness were such as would have daunted any but
+ brave and desperate men and women whom fate had winnowed. Yet all but a
+ few, who drifted back to their old homes, held out; and the foundations of
+ two more provinces of the future Dominion&mdash;New Brunswick and Upper
+ Canada&mdash;were thus broadly and soundly laid by the men whom future
+ generations honored as "United Empire Loyalists." Through all the later
+ years, their sacrifices and sufferings, their ideals and prejudices, were
+ to make a deep impress on the development of the nation which they helped
+ to found and were to influence its relations with the country which they
+ had left and with the mother country which had held their allegiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the first tasks of hewing and hauling and planting were done, the new
+ settlers called for the organization of local governments. They were quite
+ as determined as their late foes to have a voice in their own governing,
+ even though they yielded ultimate obedience to rulers overseas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the provinces by the sea a measure of self-government was at once
+ established. New Brunswick received, without question, a constitution on
+ the Nova Scotia model, with a Lieutenant Governor, an Executive Council
+ appointed to advise him, which served also as the upper house of the
+ legislature, and an elective Assembly. Of the twenty-six members of the
+ first Assembly, twenty-three were Loyalists. With a population so much at
+ one, and with the tasks of road making and school building and tax
+ collecting insistent and absorbing, no party strife divided the province
+ for many years. In Nova Scotia, too, the Loyalists were in the majority.
+ There, however, the earlier settlers soon joined with some of the
+ newcomers to form an opposition. The island of St. John, renamed Prince
+ Edward Island in 1798, had been made a separate Government and had
+ received an Assembly in 1773. Its one absorbing question was the tenure of
+ land. On a single day in 1767 the British authorities had granted the
+ whole island by lottery to army and navy officers and country gentlemen,
+ on condition of the payment of small quitrents. The quitrents were rarely
+ paid, and the tenants of the absentee landlords kept up an agitation for
+ reform which was unceasing but which was not to be successful for a
+ hundred years. In all three Maritime Provinces political and party
+ controversy was little known for a generation after the Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was more difficult to decide what form of government should be set up
+ in Canada, now that tens of thousands of English-speaking settlers dwelt
+ beside the old Canadians. Carleton, now Lord Dorchester, had returned as
+ Governor in 1786, after eight years' absence. He was still averse to
+ granting an Assembly so long as the French subjects were in the majority:
+ they did not want it, he insisted, and could not use it. But the Loyalist
+ settlers, not to be put off, joined with the English merchants of Montreal
+ and Quebec in demanding an Assembly and relief from the old French laws.
+ Carleton himself was compelled to admit the force of the conclusion of
+ William Grenville, Secretary of State for the Home Department, then in
+ control of the remnants of the colonial empire, and son of that George
+ Grenville who, as Prime Minister, had introduced the American Stamp Act of
+ 1765: "I am persuaded that it is a point of true Policy to make these
+ Concessions at a time when they may be received as a matter of favour, and
+ when it is in Our own power to regulate and direct the manner of applying
+ them, rather than to wait till they shall be extorted from us by a
+ necessity which shall neither leave us any discretion in the form nor any
+ merit in the substance of what We give." Accordingly, in 1791, the British
+ Parliament passed the Constitutional Act dividing Canada into two
+ provinces separated by the Ottawa River, Lower or French-speaking Canada
+ and Upper or English-speaking Canada, and granting each an elective
+ Assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the tide of democracy had risen, but thus far only. Few in high
+ places had learned the full lesson of the American Revolution. The
+ majority believed that the old colonies had been lost because they had not
+ been kept under a sufficiently tight rein; that democracy had been allowed
+ too great headway; that the remaining colonies, therefore, should be
+ brought under stricter administrative control; and that care should be
+ taken to build up forces to counteract the democracy which grew so rank
+ and swift in frontier soil. This conservative tendency was strengthened by
+ the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789.* The rulers of England had
+ witnessed two revolutions, and the lesson they drew from both was that it
+ was best to smother democracy in the cradle.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It will be remembered that in the debate on the
+ Constitutional Act the conflicting views of Burke and Fox on
+ the French Revolution led to the dramatic break in their
+ lifelong friendship.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For this reason the measure of representative government that had been
+ granted each of the remaining British colonies in North America was
+ carefully hedged about. The whole executive power remained in the hands of
+ the Governor or his nominees. No one yet conceived it possible that the
+ Assembly should control the Executive Council. The elective Assembly was
+ compelled to share even the lawmaking power with an upper house, the
+ Legislative Council. Not only were the members of this upper house
+ appointed by the Crown for life, but the King was empowered to bestow
+ hereditary titles upon them with a view to making the Council in the
+ fullness of time a copy of the House of Lords. A blow was struck even at
+ that traditional prerogative of the popular house, the control of the
+ purse. Carleton had urged that in every township a sixth of the land
+ should be reserved to enable His Majesty "to reward such of His provincial
+ Servants as may merit the Royal favour" and "to create and strengthen an
+ Aristocracy, of which the best use may be made on this Continent, where
+ all Governments are feeble and the general condition of things tends to a
+ wild Democracy." Grenville saw further possibilities in this suggestion.
+ It would give the Crown a revenue which would make it independent of the
+ Assembly, "a measure, which, if it had been adopted when the Old Colonies
+ were first settled, would have retained them to this hour in obedience and
+ Loyalty." Nor was this all. From the same source an endowment might be
+ obtained for a state church which would be a bulwark of order and
+ conservatism. The Constitutional Act accordingly provided for setting
+ aside lands equal in value to one-seventh of all lands granted from time
+ to time, for the support of a Protestant clergy. The Executive Council
+ received power to set up rectories in every parish, to endow them
+ liberally, and to name as rectors ministers of the Church of England.
+ Further, the Executive Council was instructed to retain an equal amount of
+ land as crown reserves, distributed judiciously in blocks between the
+ grants made to settlers. Were any radical tendencies to survive these
+ attentions, the veto power of the British Government could be counted on
+ in the last resort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the installment of self-government thus granted satisfied the
+ people. The pioneer years left little leisure for political discussion,
+ nor were there at first any general issues about which men might differ.
+ The Government was carrying on acceptably the essential tasks of
+ surveying, land granting, and road building; and each member of the
+ Assembly played his own hand and was chiefly concerned in obtaining for
+ his constituents the roads and bridges, they needed so badly. The
+ English-speaking settlers of Upper Canada were too widely scattered, and
+ the French-speaking citizens of Lower Canada were too ignorant of
+ representative institutions, to act in groups or parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much turned in these early years upon the personality of the Governor. In
+ several instances, the choice of rulers for the new provinces proved
+ fortunate. This was particularly so in the case of John Graves Simcoe,
+ Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada from 1792 to 1799. He was a good
+ soldier and a just and vigorous administrator, particularly wise in
+ setting his regulars to work building roads such as Yonge Street and
+ Dundas Street, which to this day are great provincial arteries of travel.
+ Yet there were many sources of weakness in the scheme of government&mdash;divided
+ authority, absenteeism, personal unfitness. When Dorchester was
+ reappointed in 1786, he had been made Governor in Chief of all British
+ North America. From the beginning, however, the Lieutenant Governors of
+ the various provinces asserted independent authority, and in a few years
+ the Governor General became in fact merely the Governor of the most
+ populous province, Lower Canada, in which he resided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Upper Canada, as in New Brunswick, the population was at first much at
+ one. In time, however, discordant elements appeared. Religious, or at
+ least denominational, differences began to cause friction. The great
+ majority of the early settlers in Upper Canada belonged to the Church of
+ England, whose adherents in the older colonies had nearly all taken the
+ Loyalist side. Of the Ulster Presbyterians and New England
+ Congregationalists who formed the backbone of the Revolution, few came to
+ Canada. The growth of the Methodists and Baptists in the United States
+ after the Revolution, however, made its mark on the neighboring country.
+ The first Methodist class meetings in Upper Canada, held in the United
+ Empire Loyalist settlement on the Bay of Quinte in 1791, were organized by
+ itinerant preachers from the United States; and in the western part of the
+ province pioneer Baptist evangelists from the same country reached the
+ scattered settlers neglected by the older churches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was it in religion alone that diversity grew. Simcoe had set up a
+ generous land policy which brought in many "late Loyalists," American
+ settlers whose devotion to monarchical principles would not always bear
+ close inquiry. The fantastic experiment of planting in the heart of the
+ woods of Upper Canada a group of French nobles driven out by the
+ Revolution left no trace; but Mennonites, Quakers, and Scottish
+ Highlanders contributed diverse and permanent factors to the life of the
+ province. Colonel Thomas Talbot of Malahide, "a fierce little Irishman who
+ hated Scotchmen and women, turned teetotallers out of his house, and built
+ the only good road in the province," made the beginnings of settlement
+ midway on Lake Erie. A shrewd Massachusetts merchant, Philemon Wright,
+ with his comrades, their families, servants, horses, oxen, and 10,000
+ pounds, sledded from Boston to Montreal in the winter of 1800, and thence
+ a hundred miles beyond, to found the town of Hull and establish a great
+ lumbering industry in the Ottawa Valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These differences of origin and ways of thought had not yet been reflected
+ in political life. Party strife in Upper Canada began with a factional
+ fight which took place in 1805-07 between a group of Irish officeholders
+ and a Scotch clique who held the reins of government. Weekes, an
+ Irish-American barrister, Thorpe, a puisne judge, Wyatt, the surveyor
+ general, and Willcocks, a United Irishman who had become sheriff of one of
+ the four Upper Canada districts, began to question the right to rule of
+ "the Scotch pedlars" or "the Shopkeeper Aristocracy," as Thorpe called
+ those merchants who, for the lack of other leaders, had developed an
+ influence with the governors or ruled in their frequent absence. But the
+ insurgents were backed by only a small minority in the Assembly, and when
+ the four leaders disappeared from the stage,* this curtain raiser to the
+ serious political drama which was to follow came quickly to its end.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Weekes was slain in a duel. Wyatt and Thorpe were
+ suspended by the Lieutenant Governor, Sir Francis Gore, only
+ to win redress later in England. Willcocks was dismissed
+ from office and fell fighting on the American side in the
+ War of 1812.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In Lower Canada the clash was more serious. The French Canadians, who had
+ not asked for representative government, eventually grasped its
+ possibilities and found leaders other than those ordained for them. In the
+ first Assembly there were many seigneurs and aristocrats who bore names
+ notable for six generations back Taschereau, Duchesnay, Lothiniere,
+ Rouville, Salaberry. But they soon found their surroundings uncongenial or
+ failed to be reelected. Writing in 1810 to Lord Liverpool, Secretary of
+ State for War and the Colonies, the Governor, Sir James Craig, with a fine
+ patrician scorn thus pictures the Assembly of his day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It really, my Lord, appears to me an absurdity, that the Interests of
+ certainly not an unimportant Colony, involving in them those also of no
+ inconsiderable portion of the Commercial concerns of the British Empire,
+ should be in the hands of six petty shopkeepers, a Blacksmith, a Miller,
+ and 15 ignorant peasants who form part of our present House; a Doctor or
+ Apothecary, twelve Canadian Avocats and Notaries, and four so far
+ respectable people that at least they do not keep shops, together with ten
+ English members compleat the List: there is not one person coming under
+ the description of a Canadian Gentleman among them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Governor cannot obtain among them even that sort of influence that
+ might arise from personal intercourse. I can have none with Blacksmiths,
+ Millers, and Shopkeepers; even the Avocats and Notaries who compose so
+ considerable a portion of the House, are, generally speaking, such as I
+ can nowhere meet, except during the actual sitting of Parliament, when I
+ have a day of the week expressly appropriated to the receiving a large
+ portion of them at dinner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leadership under these conditions fell to the "unprincipled Demagogues,"
+ half-educated lawyers, men "with nothing to lose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not merely as an aristocrat facing peasants and shopkeepers,
+ nor as a soldier faced by talkers, but as an Englishman on guard against
+ Frenchmen that Craig found himself at odds with his Assembly. For nearly
+ twenty years in this period England was at death grips with France, end to
+ hate and despise all Frenchmen was part of the hereditary and congenial
+ duty of all true Britons. Craig and those who counseled him were firmly
+ convinced that the new subjects were French at heart. Of the 250,000
+ inhabitants of Lower Canada, he declared, "about 20,000 or 25,000 may be
+ English or Americans, the rest are French. I use the term designedly, my
+ Lord, because I mean to say that they are in Language, in religion, in
+ manner and in attachment completely French." That there was still some
+ affection for old France, stirred by war and French victories, there is no
+ question, but that the Canadians wished to return to French allegiance was
+ untrue, even though Craig reported that such was "the general opinion of
+ all ranks with whom it is possible to converse on the subject." The French
+ Revolution had created a great gulf between Old France and New France. The
+ clergy did their utmost to bar all intercourse with the land where deism
+ and revolution held sway, and when the Roman Catholic Church and the
+ British Government combined for years on a single object, it was little
+ wonder they succeeded. Nelson's victory at Trafalgar was celebrated by a
+ Te Deum in the Roman Catholic Cathedral at Quebec. In fact, as Craig
+ elsewhere noted, the habitants were becoming rather a new and distinct
+ nationality, a nation canadienne. They ceased to be French; they declined
+ to become English; and sheltered under their "Sacred Charter"* they became
+ Canadians first and last.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * "It cannot be sufficiently inculcated ON THE PART OF
+ GOVERNMENT that the Quebec Act is a Sacred Charter, granted
+ by the King in Parliament to the Canadians as a Security for
+ their Religion, Laws, and Property." Governor Sir Frederick
+ Haldimand to Lord George Germaine, Oct. 25, 1780.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The governors were not alone in this hostility to the mass of the people.
+ There had grown up in the colony a little clique of officeholders, of whom
+ Jonathan Sewell, the Loyalist Attorney General, and later Chief Justice,
+ was the chief, full of racial and class prejudice, and in some cases
+ greedy for personal gain. Sewell declared it "indispensably necessary to
+ overwhelm and sink the Canadian population by English Protestants," and
+ was even ready to run the risk of bringing in Americans to effect this
+ end. Of the non-official English, some were strongly opposed to the
+ pretensions of the "Chateau Clique"; but others, and especially the
+ merchants, with their organ the Quebec "Mercury", were loud in their
+ denunciations of the French who were unprogressive and who as landowners
+ were incidentally trying to throw the burden of taxation chiefly on the
+ traders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first open sign of the racial division which was to bedevil the life
+ of the province came in 1806 when, in order to meet the attacks of the
+ Anglicizing party, the newspaper "Le Canadien" was established at Quebec.
+ Its motto was significant: "Notre langue, nos institutions, et nos lois."
+ Craig and his counselors took up the challenge. In 1808 he dismissed five
+ militia officers, because of their connection with the irritating journal,
+ and in 1810 he went so far as to suppress it and to throw into prison four
+ of those responsible for its management. The Assembly, which was proving
+ hard to control, was twice dissolved in three years. Naturally the
+ Governor's arbitrary course only stiffened resistance; and passions were
+ rising fast and high when illness led to his recall and the shadow of a
+ common danger from the south, the imminence of war with the United States,
+ for a time drew all men together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the foundations of the eastern provinces of Canada were being laid,
+ the wildernesses which one day were to become the western provinces were
+ just rising above the horizon of discovery. In the plains and prairies
+ between the Great Lakes and the Rockies, fur traders warred for the
+ privilege of exchanging with the Indians bad whiskey for good furs.
+ Scottish traders from Montreal, following in the footsteps of La Verendrye
+ and Niverville, pushed far into the northern wilds.* In 1788 the leading
+ traders joined forces in organizing the North-West Company. Their great
+ canoes, manned by French-Canadian voyageurs, penetrated the network of
+ waters from the Ottawa to the Saskatchewan, and poured wealth into the
+ pockets of the lordly partners in Montreal. Their rivalry wakened the
+ sleepy Hudson's Bay Company, which was now forced to leave the shores of
+ the inland sea and build posts in the interior.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is interesting to note the dominant share taken in the
+ trade and exploration of the North and West by men of
+ Highland Scotch and French extraction. For an account of La
+ Verendrye see "The Conquest of New France" and for the
+ Scotch fur traders of Montreal see "Adventurers of Oregon"
+ (in "The Chronicles of America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the Pacific coast rivalry was still keener. The sea otter and the seal
+ were a lure to the men of many nations. Canada took its part in this
+ rivalry. In 1792, when the Russians were pressing down from their Alaskan
+ posts, when the Spaniards, claiming the Pacific for their own, were
+ exploring the mouth of the Fraser, when Captain Robert Gray of Boston was
+ sailing up the mighty Columbia, and Captain Vancouver was charting the
+ northern coasts for the British Government, a young North-West Company
+ factor, Alexander Mackenzie, in his lonely post on Lake Athabaska, was
+ planning to cross the wilderness of mountains to the coast. With a fellow
+ trader, Mackay, and six Canadian voyageurs, he pushed up the Peace and the
+ Parsnip, passed by way of the Fraser and the Blackwater to the Bella
+ Coola, and thence to the Pacific, the first white man to cross the
+ northern continent. Paddling for life through swirling rapids on rivers
+ which rushed madly through sheer rock-bound canyons, swimming for shore
+ when rock or sand bar had wrecked the precious bark canoe, struggling over
+ heartbreaking portages, clinging to the sides of precipices, contending
+ against hostile Indians and fear-stricken followers, and at last winning
+ through, Mackenzie summed up what will ever remain one of the great
+ achievements of exploration in the simple record, painted in vermilion on
+ a rock in Burke Channel: Alexander Mackenzie, from Canada, by land, the
+ twenty-second of July, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three. The
+ first bond had been woven in the union of East and West. Between the
+ eastern provinces a stronger link was soon to be forged. The War of 1812
+ gave the scattered British colonies in America for the first time a living
+ sense of unity that transcended all differences, a memory of perils and of
+ victories which nourished a common patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The War of 1812 was no quarrel of Canada's. It was merely an incident in
+ the struggle between England and Napoleon. At desperate grips, both
+ contestants used whatever weapons lay ready to their hands. Sea power was
+ England's weapon, and in her claim to forbid all neutral traffic with her
+ enemies and to exercise the galling right of search, she pressed it far.
+ France trampled still more ruthlessly on American and neutral rights; but,
+ with memories of 1776 still fresh, the dominant party in the United States
+ was disposed to forgive France and to hold England to strict account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ England had struck at France, regardless of how the blow might injure
+ neutrals. Now the United States sought to strike at England through the
+ colonies, regardless of their lack of any responsibility for English
+ policy. The "war hawks" of the South and West called loudly for the speedy
+ invasion and capture of Canada as a means of punishing England. In so far
+ as the British North American colonies were but possessions of Great
+ Britain, overseas plantations, the course of the United States could be
+ justified. But potentially these colonies were more than mere possessions.
+ They were a nation in the making, with a right to their own development;
+ they were not simply a pawn in the game of Britain and the United States.
+ Quite aside from the original rights or wrongs of the war, the invasion of
+ Canada was from this standpoint an act of aggression. "Agrarian cupidity,
+ not maritime right, wages this war," insisted John Randolph of Roanoke,
+ the chief opponent of the "war hawks" in Congress. "Ever since the report
+ of the Committee on Foreign Relations came into the House, we have heard
+ but one word&mdash;like the whippoorwill, but one eternal monotonous tone&mdash;Canada,
+ Canada, Canada!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the outset there appeared no question that the conquest of Canada could
+ be, as Jefferson forecast, other than "a mere matter of marching." Eustis,
+ the Secretary of War, prophesied that "we can take Canada without
+ soldiers." Clay insisted that the Canadas were "as much under our command
+ as the Ocean is under Great Britain's." The provinces had barely half a
+ million people, two-thirds of them allied by ties of blood to Britain's
+ chief enemy, to set against the eight millions of the Republic. There were
+ fewer than ten thousand regular troops in all the colonies, half of them
+ down by the sea, far away from the danger zone, and less than fifteen
+ hundred west of Montreal. Little help could come from England, herself at
+ war with Napoleon, the master of half of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was another side. The United States was not a unit in the war;
+ New England was apathetic or hostile to the war throughout, and as late as
+ 1814 two-thirds of the army of Canada were eating beef supplied by Vermont
+ and New York contractors. Weak as was the militia of the Canadas, it was
+ stiffened by English and Canadian regulars, hardened by frontier
+ experience, and led for the most part by trained and able men, whereas an
+ inefficient system and political interference greatly weakened the
+ military force of the fighting States. Above all, the Canadians were
+ fighting for their homes. To them the war was a matter of life and death;
+ to the United States it was at best a struggle to assert commercial rights
+ or national prestige.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course and fortunes of the war call for only the briefest notice. In
+ the first year the American plans for invading Upper Canada came to grief
+ through the surrender of Hull at Detroit to Isaac Brock and the defeat at
+ Queenston Heights of the American army under Van Rensselaer. The campaign
+ ended with not a foot of Canadian soil in the invaders' hands, and with
+ Michigan lost, but Brock, Canada's brilliant leader, had fallen at
+ Queenston, and at sea the British had tasted unwonted defeat. In single
+ actions one American frigate after another proved too much for its British
+ opponent. It was a rude shock to the Mistress of the Seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second year's campaign was more checkered. In the West the Americans
+ gained the command of the Great Lakes by rapid building and good sailing,
+ and with it followed the command of all the western peninsula of Upper
+ Canada. The British General Procter was disastrously defeated at
+ Moraviantown, and his ally, the Shawanoe chief Tecumseh, one of the half
+ dozen great men of his race, was killed. York, later known as Toronto, the
+ capital of the province, was captured, and its public buildings were
+ burned and looted. But in the East fortune was kinder to the Canadians.
+ The American plan of invasion called for an attack on Montreal from two
+ directions; General Wilkinson was to sail and march down the St. Lawrence
+ from Sackett's Harbor with some eight thousand men, while General Hampton,
+ with four thousand, was to take the historic route by Lake Champlain.
+ Half-way down the St. Lawrence Wilkinson came to grief. Eighteen hundred
+ men whom he landed to drive off a force of a thousand hampering his rear
+ were decisively defeated at Chrystler's Farm. Wilkinson pushed on for a
+ few days, but when word came that Hampton had also met disaster he
+ withdrew into winter quarters. Hampton had found Colonel de Salaberry,
+ with less than sixteen hundred troops, nearly all French Canadians, making
+ a stand on the banks of the Chateauguay, thirty-five miles south of
+ Montreal. He divided his force in order to take the Canadians in front and
+ rear, only to be outmaneuvered and outfought in one of the most brilliant
+ actions of the war and forced to retire. In the closing months of the year
+ the Americans, compelled to withdraw from Fort George on the Niagara,
+ burned the adjoining town of Newark and turned its women and children into
+ the December snow. Drummond, who had succeeded Brock, gained control of
+ both sides of the Niagara and retaliated in kind by laying waste the
+ frontier villages from Lewiston to Buffalo. The year closed with
+ Amherstburg on the Detroit the only Canadian post in American hands. On
+ the sea the capture of the Chesapeake by the Shannon salved the pride of
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last year of the war was also a year of varying fortunes. In the far
+ West a small body of Canadians and Indians captured Prairie du Chien, on
+ the Mississippi, while Michilimackinac, which a force chiefly composed of
+ French-Canadian voyageurs and Indians had captured in the first months of
+ war, defied a strong assault. In Upper Canada the Americans raided the
+ western peninsula from Detroit but made their chief attack on the Niagara
+ frontier. Though they scored no permanent success, they fought well and
+ with a fair measure of fortune. The generals with whom they had been
+ encumbered at the outset of the war, Revolutionary relics or political
+ favorites, had now nearly all been replaced by abler men&mdash;Scott,
+ Brown, Exert&mdash;and their troops were better trained and better
+ equipped. In July the British forces on the Niagara were decisively beaten
+ at Chippawa. Three weeks later was fought the bloodiest battle on Canadian
+ soil, at Lundy's Lane, either side's victory at the moment but soon
+ followed by the retirement of the invading force. The British had now
+ outbuilt their opponents on Lake Ontario; and, though American ships
+ controlled Lake Erie to the end, the Ontario flotilla aided Drummond,
+ Brock's able successor, in forcing the withdrawal of Exert forces from the
+ whole peninsula in November. Farther east a third attempt to capture
+ Montreal had been defeated in the spring, after Wilkinson with four
+ thousand men had failed to drive five hundred regulars and militia from
+ the stone walls of Lacolle's Mill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until this closing year Britain had been unable, in face of the more vital
+ danger from Napoleon, to send any but trifling reenforcements to what she
+ considered a minor theater of the war. Now, with Napoleon in Elba, she was
+ free to take more vigorous action. Her navy had already swept the daring
+ little fleet of American frigates and American merchant marine from the
+ seas. Now it maintained a close blockade of all the coast and, with troops
+ from Halifax, captured and held the Maine coast north of the Penobscot.
+ Large forces of Wellington's hardy veterans crossed the ocean, sixteen
+ thousand to Canada, four thousand to aid in harrying the Atlantic coast,
+ and later nine thousand to seize the mouth of the Mississippi. Yet,
+ strangely, these hosts fared worse, because of hard fortune and poor
+ leadership, than the handful of militia and regulars who had borne the
+ brunt of the war in the first two years. Under Ross they captured
+ Washington and burned the official buildings; but under Prevost they
+ failed at Plattsburg; and under Pakenham, in January, 1815, they failed
+ against Andrew Jackson's sharpshooters at New Orleans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the last-named fight occurred, peace had been made. Both sides were
+ weary of the war, which had now, by the seeming end of the struggle
+ between England and Napoleon in which it was an incident, lost whatever it
+ formerly had of reason. Though Napoleon was still in Elba, Europe was far
+ from being at rest, and the British Ministers, backed by Wellington's
+ advice, were keen to end the war. They showed their contempt for the
+ issues at stake by sending to the peace conference at Ghent three
+ commissioners as incompetent as ever represented a great power, Gambier,
+ Goulburn, and Adams. To face these the United States had sent John Quincy
+ Adams, Albert Gallatin, Henry Clay, James Bayard, and Jonathan Russell, as
+ able and astute a group of players for great stakes as ever gathered round
+ a table. In these circumstances the British representatives were lucky to
+ secure peace on the basis of the status quo ante. Canada had hoped that
+ sufficient of the unsettled Maine wilderness would be retained to link up
+ New Brunswick with the inland colony of Quebec, but this proposal was soon
+ abandoned. In the treaty not one of the ostensible causes of the war was
+ even mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war had the effect of unifying Canadian feeling. Once more it had been
+ determined that Canada was not to lose her identity in the nation to the
+ south. In Upper Canada, especially in the west, there were many recent
+ American settlers who sympathized openly with their kinsmen, but of these
+ some departed, some were jailed, and others had a change of heart. Lower
+ Canada was a unit against the invader, and French-Canadian troops on every
+ occasion covered themselves with glory. To the Canadians, as the smaller
+ people, and as the people whose country had been the chief battle ground,
+ the war in later years naturally bulked larger than to their neighbors. It
+ left behind it unfortunate legacies of hostility to the United States and,
+ among the governing classes, of deep-rooted opposition to its democratic
+ institutions. But it left also memories precious for a young people&mdash;the
+ memory of Brock and Macdonell and De Salaberry, of Laura Secord and her
+ daring tramp through the woods to warn of American attacks, of Stony Creek
+ and Lundy's Lane, Chrystler's Farm and Chateauguay, the memory of
+ sacrifice, of endurance, and of courage that did not count the odds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor were the evil legacies to last for all time. Three years after peace
+ had been made the statesmen of the United States and of Great Britain had
+ the uncommon sense to take a great step toward banishing war between the
+ neighbor peoples. The Rush-Bagot Convention, limiting the naval armament
+ on the Great Lakes to three vessels not exceeding one hundred tons each,
+ and armed only with one eighteen-pounder, though not always observed in
+ the letter, proved the beginning of a sane relationship which has lasted
+ for a century. Had not this agreement nipped naval rivalry in the bud,
+ fleets and forts might have lined the shores and increased the strain of
+ policy and the likelihood of conflict. The New World was already preparing
+ to sound its message to the Old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. THE FIGHT FOR SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The history of British North America in the quarter of a century that
+ followed the War of 1812 is in the main the homely tale of pioneer life.
+ Slowly little clearings in the vast forest were widened and won to order
+ and abundance; slowly community was linked to community; and out of the
+ growing intercourse there developed the complex of ways and habits and
+ interests that make up the everyday life of a people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the provinces called for settlers, and they did not call in vain. For
+ a time northern New England continued to overflow into the Eastern
+ Townships of Lower Canada, the rolling lands south of the St. Lawrence
+ which had been left untouched by riverbound seigneur and habitant. Into
+ Upper Canada, as well, many individual immigrants came from the south,
+ some of the best the Republic had to give, merchants and manufacturers
+ with little capital but much shrewd enterprise, but also some it could
+ best spare, fugitives from justice and keepers of the taverns that adorned
+ every four corners. Yet slowly this inflow slackened. After the war the
+ Canadian authorities sought to avoid republican contagion and moreover the
+ West of the United States itself was calling for men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if fewer came in across the border, many more sailed from across the
+ seas. Not again until the twentieth century were the northern provinces to
+ receive so large a share of British emigrants as came across in the
+ twenties and thirties. Swarms were preparing to leave the overcrowded
+ British hives. Corn laws and poor laws and famine, power-driven looms that
+ starved the cottage weaver, peace that threw an army on a crowded and
+ callous labor market, landlords who rack-rented the Connaughtman's last
+ potato or cleared Highland glens of folks to make way for sheep, rulers
+ who persisted in denying the masses any voice in their own government&mdash;all
+ these combined to drive men forth in tens of thousands. Australia was
+ still a land of convict settlements and did not attract free men. To most
+ the United States was the land of promise. Yet, thanks to state aid,
+ private philanthropy, landlords' urging and cheap fares on the ships that
+ came to St. John and Quebec for timber, Canada and the provinces by the
+ sea received a notable share. In the quarter of a century following the
+ peace with Napoleon, British North America received more British emigrants
+ than the United States and the Australian colonies together, though many
+ were merely birds of passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country west of the Great Lakes did not share in this flood of
+ settlement, except for one tragic interlude. Lord Selkirk, a Scotchman of
+ large sympathy and vision, convinced that emigration was the cure for the
+ hopeless misery he saw around him, acquired a controlling interest in the
+ Hudson's Bay Company, and sought to plant colonies in a vast estate
+ granted from its domains. Between 1811 and 1815 he sent out to Hudson Bay,
+ and thence to the Red River, two or three hundred crofters from the
+ Highlands and the Orkneys. A little later these were joined by some Swiss
+ soldiers of fortune who had fought for Canada in the War of 1812. But
+ Selkirk had reckoned without the partners of the North-West Company of
+ Montreal, who were not prepared to permit mere herders and tillers to
+ disturb the Indians and the game. The Nor'Westers attacked the helpless
+ colonists and massacred a score of them. Selkirk retorted in kind, leading
+ out an armed band which seized the Nor'Westers' chief post at Fort
+ William. The war was then transferred to the courts, with heart-breaking
+ delays and endless expense. At last Selkirk died broken in spirit, and
+ most of his colonists drifted to Canada or across the border. But a
+ handful held on, and for fifty years their little settlement on the Red
+ River remained a solitary outpost of colonization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once arrived in Canada, the settler soon found that he had no primrose
+ path before him. Canada remained for many years a land of struggling
+ pioneers, who had little truck or trade with the world out of sight of
+ their log shacks. The habitant on the seigneuries of Lower Canada
+ continued to farm as his grandfather had farmed, finding his holding
+ sufficient for his modest needs, even though divided into ever narrower
+ ribbons as le bon Dieu sent more and yet more sons to share the heritage.
+ The English-speaking settler, equipped with ax and sickle and flail, with
+ spinning wheel and iron kettle, lived a life almost equally primitive and
+ self-contained. He and his good wife grew the wheat, the corn, and the
+ potatoes, made the soap and the candles, the maple sugar and the "yarbs,"
+ the deerskin shoes and the homespun-cloth that met their needs. They had
+ little to buy and little to sell. In spite of the preference which Great
+ Britain gave Canadian grain, in return for the preference exacted on
+ British manufactured goods, practically no wheat was exported until the
+ close of this period. The barrels of potash and pearl-ash leached out from
+ the ashes of the splendid hardwood trees which he burned as enemies were
+ the chief source of ready money for the backwoods settler. The one
+ substantial export of the colonies came, not from the farmer's clearing,
+ but from the forest. Great rafts of square pine timber were floated down
+ the Ottawa or the St. John every spring to be loaded for England. The
+ lumberjack lent picturesqueness to the landscape and the vocabulary and
+ circulated ready money, but his industry did little directly to advance
+ permanent settlement or the wise use of Canadian resources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The self-contained life of each community and each farm pointed to the
+ lack of good means of transport. New Brunswick and the Canadas were
+ fortunate in the possession of great lake and river systems, but these
+ were available only in summer and were often impeded by falls and rapids.
+ On these waters the Indian bark canoe had given way to the French bateau,
+ a square-rigged flat-bottomed boat, and after the war the bateau shared
+ the honors with the larger Durham boat brought in from "the States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canadians took their full share in developing steamship transportation. In
+ 1809, two years after Fulton's success on the Hudson, John Molson built
+ and ran a steamer between Montreal and Quebec. The first vessel to cross
+ the Atlantic wholly under steam, the Royal William, was built in Quebec
+ and sailed from that port in 1833. Following and rivaling American
+ enterprise, side-wheelers, marvels of speed and luxury for the day, were
+ put on the lakes in the thirties. Canals were built, the Lachine in
+ 1821-25, the Welland around Niagara Falls in 1824-29, and the Rideau, as a
+ military undertaking, in 1826-32, all in response to the stimulus given by
+ De Witt Clinton, who had begun the "Erie Ditch" in 1817. On land, road
+ making made slower progress. The blazed trail gave way to the corduroy
+ road, and the pack horse to the oxcart or the stage. Upper Canada had the
+ honor of inventing, in 1835, the plank road, which for some years
+ thereafter became the fashion through the forested States to the south.
+ But at best neither roads nor vehicles were fitted for carrying large
+ loads from inland farms to waterside markets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Money and banks were as necessary to develop intercourse as roads and
+ canals. Until after the War of 1812, when army gold and army bills ran
+ freely, money was rare and barter served pioneer needs. For many years
+ after the war a jumble of English sovereigns and shillings, of Spanish
+ dollars, French crowns, and American silver, made up the currency in use,
+ circulating sometimes by weight and sometimes by tale, at rates that were
+ constantly shifting. The position of the colonies as a link between Great
+ Britain and the United States, was curiously illustrated in the currency
+ system. The motley jumble of coins in use were rated in Halifax currency,
+ a mere money of account or bookkeeping standard, with no actual coins to
+ correspond, adapted to both English and United States currency systems.
+ The unit was the pound, divided into shillings and pence as in England,
+ but the pound was made equal to four dollars in American money; it took 1
+ pound 4s. 4d. in Halifax currency to make 1 pound sterling. Still more
+ curious was the influence of American banking. Montreal merchants in 1808
+ took up the ideas of Alexander Hamilton and after several vain attempts
+ founded the Bank of Montreal in 1817, with those features of government
+ charter, branch banks, and restrictions as to the proportion of debts to
+ capital and the holding of real property which had marked Hamilton's plan.
+ But while Canadian banks, one after another, were founded on the same
+ model and throughout adhered to an asset-secured currency basis,
+ Hamilton's own country abandoned his ideas, usually for the worse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the social life of the cities the influence of the official classes
+ and, in Halifax and Quebec, of the British redcoats stationed there was
+ all pervading. In the country the pioneers took what diversions a hard
+ life permitted. There were "bees" and "frolics," ranging from strenuous
+ barn raisings, with heavy drinking and fighting, to mild apple parings or
+ quilt patchings. There were the visits of the Yankee peddler with his
+ "notions," his welcome pack, and his gossip. Churches grew, thanks in part
+ to grants of government land or old endowments or gifts from missionary
+ societies overseas, but more to the zeal of lay preachers and circuit
+ riders. Schools fared worse. In Lower Canada there was an excellent system
+ of classical schools for the priests and professional classes, and there
+ were numerous convents which taught the girls, but the habitants were for
+ the most part quite untouched by book learning. In Upper Canada grammar
+ schools and academies were founded with commendable promptness, and a
+ common school system was established in 1816, but grants were niggardly
+ and compulsion was lacking. Even at the close of the thirties only one
+ child in seven was in school, and he was, as often as not, committed to
+ the tender mercies of some broken-down pensioner or some ancient tippler
+ who could barely sign his mark. There was but little administrative
+ control by the provincial authorities. The textbooks in use came largely
+ from the United States and glorified that land and all its ways in the
+ best Fourth-of-July manner, to the scandal of the loyal elect. The press
+ was represented by a few weekly newspapers; only one daily existed in
+ Upper Canada before 1840.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against this background there developed during the period 1815-41 a tense
+ constitutional struggle which was to exert a profound influence on the
+ making of the nation. The stage on which the drama was enacted was a small
+ one, and the actors were little known to the world of their day, but the
+ drama had an interest of its own and no little significance for the
+ future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one aspect the struggle for self-government in British North America
+ was simply a local manifestation of a world-wide movement which found more
+ notable expression in other lands. After a troubled dawn, democracy was
+ coming to its own. In England the black reaction which had identified all
+ proposals for reform with treasonable sympathy for bloodstained France was
+ giving way, and the middle classes were about to triumph in the great
+ franchise reform of 1832. In the United States, after a generation of
+ conservatism, Jacksonian democracy was to sweep all before it. These
+ developments paralleled and in some measure influenced the movement of
+ events in the British North American provinces. But this movement had a
+ color of its own. The growth of self-government in an independent country
+ was one thing; in a colony owing allegiance to a supreme Parliament
+ overseas, it was quite another. The task of the provinces&mdash;not solved
+ in this period, it is true, but squarely faced&mdash;was to reconcile
+ democracy and empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of the Canadas in 1791, and of the provinces by the sea a
+ little earlier, had been given the right to elect one house of the
+ legislature. More than this instalment of self-government the authorities
+ were not prepared to grant. The people, or rather the property holders
+ among them, might be entrusted to vote taxes and appropriations, to
+ present grievances, and to take a share in legislation. They could not,
+ however, be permitted to control the Government, because, to state an
+ obvious fact, they could not govern themselves as well as their betters
+ could rule them. Besides, if the people of a colony did govern themselves,
+ what would become of the rights and interests of the mother country? What
+ would become of the Empire itself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was the use and object of the Empire? In brief, according to the
+ theory and practice then in force, the end of empire was the profit which
+ comes from trade; the means was the political subordination of the
+ colonies to prevent interference with this profit; and the debit entry set
+ against this profit was the cost of the diplomacy, the armaments, and the
+ wars required to hold the overseas possessions against other powers. The
+ policy was still that which had been set forth in the preamble of the
+ Navigation Act of 1663, ensuring the mother country the sole right to sell
+ European wares in its colonies: "the maintaining a greater correspondence
+ and kindness between them [the subjects at home and those in the
+ plantations] and keeping them in a firmer dependence upon it [the mother
+ country], and rendering them yet more beneficial and advantageous unto it
+ in the further Imployment and Encrease of English Shipping and Seamen, and
+ vent of English Woollen and other Manufactures and Commodities rendering
+ the Navigation to and from the same more safe and cheape, and makeing this
+ Kingdom a Staple not only of the Commodities of those Plantations but also
+ of the Commodities of other countries and places for the supplying of
+ them, and it being the usage of other Nations to keep their [plantation]
+ Trade to themselves." Adam Smith had raised a doubt as to the wisdom of
+ the end. The American Revolution had raised a doubt as to the wisdom of
+ the means. Yet, with significant changes, the old colonial system lasted
+ for full two generations after 1776.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second British Empire, which rose after the loss of the first in
+ 1783, the means to the old end were altered. To secure control and to
+ prevent disaffection and democratic folly, the authorities relied not
+ merely on their own powers but on the cooperation of friendly classes and
+ interests in the colonies themselves. Their direct control was exercised
+ in many ways. In last reserve there was the supreme authority of King and
+ Parliament to bind the colonies by treaty and by law and the right to veto
+ any colonial enactment. This was as before the Revolution. One change lay
+ in the renunciation in 1778 of the intention to use the supreme
+ legislative power to levy taxes, though the right to control the fiscal
+ system of the colonies in conformity with imperial policy was still
+ claimed and practised. In fact, far from seeking to secure a direct
+ revenue, the British Government was more than content to pay part of the
+ piper's fee for the sake of being able to call the tune. "It is considered
+ by the Well wishers of Government," wrote Milnes, Lieutenant Governor of
+ Lower Canada, in 1800, "as a fortunate Circumstance that the Revenue is
+ not at present equal to the Expenditure." A further change came in the
+ minute control exercised by the Colonial Office, or rather by the
+ permanent clerks who, in Charles Buller's phrase, were really "Mr. Mother
+ Country." The Governor was the local agent of the Colonial Office. He
+ acted on its instructions and was responsible to it, and to it alone, for
+ the exercise of the wide administrative powers entrusted to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all these powers, it was believed, would fail in their purpose if
+ democracy were allowed to grow unchecked in the colonies themselves. It
+ was an essential part of the colonial policy of the time to build up
+ conservative social forces among the people and to give a controlling
+ voice in the local administration to a nominated and official class. It
+ has been seen that the statesmen of 1791 looked to a nominated executive
+ and legislative council, an hereditary aristocracy, and an established
+ church, to keep the colony in hand. British legislation fostered and
+ supported a ruling class in the colonies, and in turn this class was to
+ support British connection and British control. How this policy, half
+ avowed and half unconscious, worked out in each of the provinces must now
+ be recorded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Upper Canada party struggles did not take shape until well after the
+ War of 1812. At the founding of the colony the people had been very much
+ of one temper and one condition. In time, however, divergences appeared
+ and gradually hardened into political divisions. A governing class, or
+ rather clique, was the first to become differentiated. Its emergence was
+ slower than in New Brunswick, for instance, since Upper Canada had
+ received few of the Loyalists who were distinguished by social position or
+ political experience. In time a group was formed by the accident of
+ occupation, early settlement, residence in the little town of York, the
+ capital after 1794, the holding of office, or by some advantage in wealth
+ or education or capacity which in time became cumulative. The group came
+ to be known as the Family Compact. There had been, in fact, no
+ intermarriage among its members beyond what was natural in a small and
+ isolated community, but the phrase had a certain appositeness. They were
+ closely linked by loyalty to Church and King, by enmity to republics and
+ republicans, by the memory of the sacrifice and peril they or their
+ fathers had shared, and by the conviction that the province owed them the
+ best living it could bestow. This living they succeeded in collecting.
+ "The bench, the magistracy, the high officials of the established church,
+ and a great part of the legal profession," declared Lord Durham in 1839,
+ "are filled by the adherents of this party; by grant or purchase they have
+ acquired nearly the whole of the waste lands of the province; they are all
+ powerful in the chartered banks, and till lately shared among themselves
+ almost exclusively all offices of trust and profit." Fortunately the last
+ absurdity of creating Dukes of Toronto and Barons of Niagara Falls was
+ never carried through, or rather was postponed a full century; but this
+ touch was scarcely needed to give the clique its cachet. The ten-year
+ governorship of Sir Peregrine Maitland (1818-28), a most punctilious
+ person, gave the finishing touches to this backwoods aristocracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great majority of the group, men of the Scott and Boulton, Sherwood
+ and Hagerman and Allan MacNab types, had nothing but their prejudices to
+ distinguish them, but two of their number were of outstanding capacity.
+ John Beverley Robinson, Attorney General from 1819 to 1829 and thereafter
+ for over thirty years Chief Justice, was a true aristocrat, distrustful of
+ the rabble, but as honest and highminded as he was able, seeking his
+ country's gain, as he saw it, not his own. A more rugged and domineering
+ character, equally certain of his right to rule and less squeamish about
+ the means, was John Strachan, afterwards Bishop of Toronto. Educated a
+ Presbyterian, he had come to Canada from Aberdeen as a dominie but had
+ remained as an Anglican clergyman in a capacity promising more
+ advancement. His abounding vigor and persistence soon made him the
+ dominant force in the Church, and with a convert's zeal he labored to give
+ it exclusive place and power. The opposition to the Family Compact was of
+ a more motley hue, as is the way with oppositions. Opposition became
+ potential when new settlers poured into the province from the United
+ States or overseas, marked out from their Loyalist forerunners not merely
+ by differences of political background and experience but by differences
+ in religion. The Church of England had been dominant among the Loyalists;
+ but the newcomers were chiefly Methodist and Presbyterian. Opposition
+ became actual with the rise of concrete and acute grievances and with the
+ appearance of leaders who voiced the growing discontent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political exclusiveness of the Family Compact did not rouse resentment
+ half as deep as did their religious, or at least denominational,
+ pretensions. The refusal of the Compact to permit Methodist ministers to
+ perform the marriage ceremony was not soon forgotten. There were scores of
+ settlements where no clergyman of the Established Church of England or of
+ Scotland resided, and marriages here had been of necessity performed by
+ other ministers. A bill passed the Assembly in 1824 legalizing such
+ marriages in the past and giving the required authority for the future;
+ and when it was rejected by the Legislative Council, resentment flamed
+ high. An attempt of Strachan to indict the loyalty of practically all but
+ the Anglican clergy intensified this feeling; and the critics went on to
+ call in question the claims of his Church to establishment and landed
+ endowment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The land question was the most serious that faced the province. The
+ administration of those in power was condemned on three distinct counts.
+ The granting of land to individuals had been lavish; it had been lax; and
+ it had been marked by gross favoritism. By 1824, when the population was
+ only 150,000, some 11,000,000 acres had been granted; ninety years later,
+ when the population was 2,700,000, the total amount of improved land was
+ only 13,000,000 acres. Moreover the attempt to use vast areas of the Crown
+ Lands to endow solely the Anglican Church roused bitter jealousies. Yet
+ even these grievances paled in actual hardship beside the results of
+ holding the vast waste areas unimproved. What with Crown Reserves, Clergy
+ Reserves, grants to those who had served the state, and holdings picked up
+ by speculators from soldiers or poorer Loyalists for a few pounds or a few
+ gallons of whisky, millions of acres were held untenanted and unimproved,
+ waiting for a rise in value as a consequence of the toil of settlers on
+ neighboring farms. Not one-tenth of the lands granted were occupied by the
+ persons to whom they had been assigned. The province had given away almost
+ all its vast heritage, and more than nine-tenths of it was still in
+ wilderness. These speculative holdings made immensely more difficult every
+ common neighborhood task. At best the machinery and the money for building
+ roads, bridges, and schools were scanty, but with these unimproved
+ reserves thrust in between the scattered shacks, the task was
+ disheartening. "The reserve of two-sevenths of the land for the Crown and
+ clergy," declared the township of Sandwich in 1817, "must for a long time
+ keep the country a wilderness, a harbour for wolves, a hindrance to a
+ compact and good neighborhood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A further source of discontent developed in the disabilities affecting
+ recent American settlers. A court decision in 1824 held that no one who
+ had resided in the United States after 1783 could possess or transmit
+ British citizenship, with which went the right to inherit real estate.
+ This decision bore heavily upon thousands of "late Loyalists" and more
+ recent incomers. Under the instructions of the Colonial Office, a remedial
+ bill was introduced in the Legislative Council in 1827, but it was a
+ grudging, halfway measure which the Assembly refused to accept. After
+ several sessions of quarreling, the Assembly had its way; but in the
+ meantime the men affected had been driven into permanent and active
+ opposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leaders of the movement of resistance which now began to gather force
+ included all sorts and conditions of men. The fiercest and most aggressive
+ were two Scotchmen, Robert Gourlay and William Lyon Mackenzie. Gourlay,
+ one of those restless and indispensable cranks who make the world turn
+ round, active, obstinate, imprudent, uncompromisingly devoted to the
+ common good as he saw it, came to Canada in 1817 on settlement and
+ colonization bent. Innocent inquiries which he sent broadcast as to the
+ condition of the province gave the settlers an opportunity for voicing
+ their pent-up discontent, and soon Gourlay was launched upon the sea of
+ politics. Mackenzie, who came to Canada three years later, was a born
+ agitator, fearless, untiring, a good hater, master of avitriolic
+ vocabulary, and absolutely unpurchasable. He found his vein in weekly
+ journalism, and for nearly forty years was the stormy petrel of Canadian
+ politics. From England there came, among others, Dr. John Rolph, shrewd
+ and politic, and Captain John Matthews, a half-pay artillery officer.
+ Peter Perry, downright and rugged and of a homely eloquence, represented
+ the Loyalists of the Bay of Quinte, which was the center of Canadian
+ Methodism. Among the newer comers from the United States, the foremost
+ were Barnabas Bidwell, who had been Attorney General of Massachusetts but
+ had fled to Canada in 1810 when accused of misappropriating public money,
+ and his son, Marshall Spring Bidwell, one of the ablest and most
+ single-minded men who ever entered Canadian public life. From Ireland came
+ Dr. William Warren Baldwin, whose son Robert, born in Canada, was less
+ surpassingly able than the younger Bidwell but equally moderate and
+ equally beyond suspicion of faction or self-seeking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How were these men to bring about the reform which they desired? Their
+ first aim was obviously to secure a majority in the Assembly, and by the
+ election of 1828 they attained this first object. But the limits of the
+ power of the Assembly they soon discovered. Without definite leadership,
+ with no control over the Administration, and with even legislative power
+ divided, it could effect little. It was in part disappointment at the
+ failure of the Assembly that accounted for the defeat of the Reformers in
+ 1830, though four years later this verdict was again reversed. Clearly the
+ form of government itself should be changed. But in what way? Here a
+ divergence in the ranks of the Reformers became marked. One party, looking
+ upon the United States as the utmost achievement in democracy, proposed to
+ follow its example in making the upper house elective and thus to give the
+ people control of both branches of the Legislature. Another group, of whom
+ Robert Baldwin was the chief, saw that this change would not suffice. In
+ the States the Executive was also elected by the people. Here, where the
+ Governor would doubtless continue to be appointed by the Crown, some other
+ means must be found to give the people full control. Baldwin found it in
+ the British Cabinet system, which gave real power to ministers having the
+ confidence of a majority in Parliament. The Governor would remain, but he
+ would be only a figurehead, a constitutional monarch acting, like the
+ King, only on the advice of his constitutional advisers. Responsible
+ government was Baldwin's one and absorbing idea, and his persistence led
+ to its ultimate adoption, along with a proposal for an elective Council,
+ in the Reform party's programme in 1834. Delay in affecting this reform,
+ Baldwin told the Governor a year later, was "the great and all absorbing
+ grievance before which all others sank into insignificance." The remedy
+ could be applied "without in the least entrenching upon the just and
+ necessary prerogatives of the Crown, which I consider, when administered
+ by the Lieutenant. Governor through the medium of a provincial ministry
+ responsible to the provincial parliament, to be an essential part of the
+ constitution of the province." In brief, Baldwin insisted that Simcoe's
+ rhetorical outburst in 1791, when he declared that Upper Canada was "a
+ perfect Image and Transcript of the British Government and Constitution,"
+ should be made effective in practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of the conflict between the Compact and the Reformers cannot be
+ followed in detail. It had elements of tragedy, as when Gourlay was
+ hounded into prison, where he was broken in health and shattered in mind,
+ and then exiled from the province for criticism of the Government which
+ was certainly no more severe than now appears every day in Opposition
+ newspapers. The conflict had elements of the ludicrous, too, as when
+ Captain Matthews was ordered by his military superiors to return to
+ England because in the unrestrained festivities of New Year's Eve he had
+ called on a strolling troupe to play Yankee Doodle and had shouted to the
+ company, "Hats off"; or when Governor Maitland overturned fourteen feet of
+ the Brock Monument to remove a copy of Mackenzie's journal, the "Colonial
+ Advocate", which had inadvertently been included in the corner stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weapons of the Reformers were the platform, the press, and
+ investigations and reports by parliamentary committees. The Compact hit
+ back in its own way. Every critic was denounced as a traitor. Offending
+ editors were put in the pillory. Mackenzie was five times expelled from
+ the House, only to be returned five times by his stubborn supporters.
+ Matters were at a deadlock, and it became clear either that the British
+ Parliament, which alone could amend the Constitution, must intervene or
+ else that the Reformers would be driven to desperate paths. But before
+ matters came to this pass, an acute crisis had arisen in Lower Canada
+ which had its effect on all the provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Lower Canada, the conflict which had been smoldering before the war had
+ since then burst into flame. The issues of this conflict were more
+ clearcut than in any of the other provinces. A coherent opposition had
+ formed earlier, and from beginning to end it dominated the Assembly. The
+ governing forces were outwardly much the same as in Upper Canada&mdash;a
+ Lieutenant Governor responsible to the Colonial Office, an Executive
+ Council appointed by the Crown but coming to have the independent power of
+ a well-entrenched bureaucracy, and a Legislative Council nominated by the
+ Crown and, until nearly the end of the period, composed chiefly of the
+ same men who served in the Executive. The little clique in control had
+ much less popular backing than the Family Compact of Upper Canada and were
+ of lower caliber. Robert Christie, an English-speaking member of the
+ Assembly, who may be counted an unprejudiced witness since he was four
+ times expelled by the majority in that house, refers to the real rulers of
+ the province as "a few rapacious, overbearing, and irresponsible
+ officials, without stake or other connexion in the country than their
+ interests." At their head stood Jonathan Sewell, a Massachusetts Loyalist
+ who had come to Lower Canada by way of New Brunswick in 1789, and who for
+ over forty years as Attorney General, Chief Justice, or member of
+ Executive and Legislative Councils, was the power behind the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opposition to the bureaucrats at first included both English and
+ French elements, but the English minority were pulled in contrary ways.
+ Their antecedents were not such as to lead them to accept meekly either
+ the political or the social pretensions of the "Chateau Clique"; the
+ American settlers in the Eastern Townships, and the Scotch and American
+ merchants who were building up Quebec and Montreal, had called for
+ self-government, not government from above. Yet their racial and religious
+ prejudices were strong and made them unwilling to accept in place of the
+ bureaucrats the dominance of an unprogressive habitant majority. The first
+ leader of the opposition which developed in the Assembly after the War of
+ 1812 was James Stuart, the son of the leading Anglican clergyman of his
+ day, but he soon fell away and became a mainstay of the bureaucracy. His
+ brother Andrew, however, kept up for many years longer a more
+ disinterested fight. Another Scot, John Neilson, editor of the Quebec
+ "Gazette", was until 1833 foremost among the assailants of the
+ bureaucracy. But steadily, as the extreme nationalist claims of the
+ French-speaking majority provoked reprisals and as the conviction grew
+ upon the minority that they would never be anything but a minority,* most
+ of them accepted clique rule as a lesser evil than "rule by priest and
+ demagogue."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The natural increase of the French-Canadian race under
+ British rule is one of the most extraordinary phenomena in
+ social history. The following figures illustrate the rate of
+ that increase: the number was 16,417 in 1706; 69,810 in
+ 1765; 479,288 in 1825; 697,084 in 1844. The population of
+ Canada East or Lower Canada in 1844 was made up as follows:
+ French Canadians, 524,244; English Canadians. 85,660;
+ English, 11,895; Irish, 43,982; Scotch, 13,393; Americans,
+ 11,946; born in other countries, 1329; place of birth not
+ specified, 4635.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the reform movement in Upper Canada there were a multiplicity of
+ leaders and a constant shifting of groups. In Lower Canada, after the
+ defection of James Stuart in 1817, there was only one leader, Louis Joseph
+ Papineau. For twenty years Papineau was the uncrowned king of the
+ province. His commanding figure, his powers of oratory, outstanding in a
+ race of orators, his fascinating manners, gave him an easy mastery over
+ his people. Prudence did not hamper his flights; compromise was a word not
+ found in his vocabulary. Few men have been better equipped for the
+ agitator's task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His father, Joseph Papineau, though of humble birth, had risen high in the
+ life of the province. He had won distinction in his profession as a
+ notary, as a speaker in the Assembly, and as a soldier in the defense of
+ Quebec against the American invaders of 1775. In 1804 he had purchased the
+ seigneury of La Petite Nation, far up the Ottawa. Louis Joseph Papineau
+ followed in his father's footsteps. Born in 1786, he served loyally and
+ bravely in the War of 1812. In the same year he entered the Assembly and
+ made his place at a single stroke. Barely three years after his election,
+ he was chosen Speaker, and with a brief break he held that post for over
+ twenty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Papineau did not soon or lightly begin his crusade against the Government.
+ For the first five years of his Speakership, he confined himself to the
+ routine duties of his office. As late as 1820 he pronounced a glowing
+ eulogy on the Constitution which Great Britain had granted the province.
+ In that year he tested the extent of the privileges so granted by joining
+ in the attempt of the Assembly to assert its full control of the purse;
+ but it was not until the project of uniting the two Canadas had made clear
+ beyond dispute the hostility of the governing powers that he began his
+ unrelenting warfare against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was much to be said for a reunion of the two Canadas. The St.
+ Lawrence bound them together, though Acts of Parliament had severed them.
+ Upper Canada, as an inland province, restricted in its trade with its
+ neighbor to the south, was dependent upon Lower Canada for access to the
+ outer world. Its share of the duties collected at the Lower Canada ports
+ until 1817 had been only one-eighth, afterwards increased to one-fifth.
+ This inequality proved a constant source of friction. The crying necessity
+ of cooperation for the improvement of the St. Lawrence waterway gave
+ further ground for the contention that only by a reunion of the two
+ provinces could efficiency be secured. In Upper Canada the Reformers were
+ in favor of this plan, but the Compact, fearful of any disturbance of
+ their vested interests, tended to oppose it. In Lower Canada the chief
+ support came from the English element. The governing clique, as the older
+ established body, had no doubt that they could bring the western section
+ under their sway in case of union. But the main reason for their advocacy
+ was the desire to swamp the French Canadians by an English majority.
+ Sewell, the chief supporter of the project, frankly took this ground. The
+ Governor, Lord Dalhousie, and the Colonial Office adopted his view; and in
+ 1822 an attempt was made to rush a Union Bill through the British
+ Parliament without any notice to those most concerned. It was blocked for
+ the moment by the opposition of a Whig group led by Burdett and
+ Mackintosh; and then Papineau and Neilson sailed to London and succeeded
+ in inducing the Ministry to stay its hand. The danger was averted; but
+ Papineau had become convinced that if his people were to retain the rights
+ given them by their "Sacred Charter" they would have to fight for them. If
+ they were to save their power, they must increase it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could this be done? Baldwin's bold and revolutionary policy of making
+ the Executive responsible to the Assembly did not seem within the range of
+ practical politics. It meant in practice the abandonment of British
+ control, and this the Colonial Office was not willing to grant. Antoine
+ Panet and other Assembly leaders had suggested in 1815 that it would be
+ well, "if it were possible, to grant a number of places as Councillors or
+ other posts of honour and of profit to those who have most influence over
+ the majority in the Assembly, to hold so long as they maintained this
+ influence," and James Stuart urged the same tentative suggestion a year
+ later. But even before this the Colonial Office had made clear its
+ position. "His Majesty's Government," declared the Colonial Secretary,
+ Lord Bathurst, in 1814, "never can admit so novel &amp; inconvenient a
+ Principle as that of allowing the Governor of a Colony to be divested of
+ his responsibility [to the Colonial Office] for the acts done during his
+ administration or permit him to shield himself under the advice of any
+ Persons, however respectable, either from their character or their
+ Office."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other courses had the sanction of precedent, one of English, the other
+ of American example. The English House of Commons had secured its dominant
+ place in the government of the country by its control of the purse. Why
+ should not the Assembly do likewise? One obvious difficulty lay in the
+ fact that the Assembly was not the sole authority in raising revenue. The
+ British Parliament had retained the power to levy certain duties as part
+ of its system of commercial control, and other casual and territorial dues
+ lay in the right of the Crown. From 1820, therefore, the Assembly's main
+ aim was twofold&mdash;to obtain control of these remaining sources of
+ revenue, and by means of this power to bludgeon the Legislative Council
+ and the Governor into compliance with its wishes. The Colonial Office made
+ concessions, offering to resign all its taxing powers in return for a
+ permanent civil list, that is, an assurance that the salaries of the chief
+ officials would not be questioned annually. The offer was reasonable in
+ itself but, as it would have hampered the full use of the revenue
+ bludgeon, it was scornfully declined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other aim of the Patriotes, as the Opposition styled themselves, was
+ to conquer the Legislative Council by making it elective. Papineau, in
+ spite of his early prejudices, was drawn more and more into sympathy with
+ the form of democracy worked out in the United States. In fact, he not
+ only looked to it as a model but, as the thirties wore on, he came to hope
+ that moral, if not physical, support might be found there for his campaign
+ against the English Government. After 1830 the demand for an elective
+ Legislative Council became more and more insistent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The struggle soon reached a deadlock. Governor followed Governor: Lord
+ Dalhousie, Sir James Kempt, Lord Aylmer, all in turn failed to allay the
+ storm. The Assembly raised its claims each session and fulminated against
+ all the opposing powers in windy resolutions. Papineau, embittered by
+ continued opposition, carried away by his own eloquence, and steadied by
+ no responsibility of office, became more implacable in his demands. Many
+ of his moderate supporters&mdash;Neilson, Andrew Stuart, Quesnel,
+ Cuvillier&mdash;fell away, only to be overwhelmed in the first election at
+ a wave of the great tribune's hand. Business was blocked, supplies were
+ not voted, and civil servants made shift without salary as best they
+ could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Government awoke, or half awoke, to the seriousness of the
+ situation. In 1835 a Royal Commission of three, with the new Governor
+ General, Lord Gosford, as chairman, was appointed to make inquiries and to
+ recommend a policy. Gosford, a genial Irishman, showed himself most
+ conciliatory in both private intercourse and public discourse.
+ Unfortunately the rash act of the new Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada,
+ Sir Francis Bond Head, in publishing the instructions of the Colonial
+ Office, showed that the policy of Downing Street was the futile one of
+ conciliation without concession. The Assembly once more refused to grant
+ supplies without redress of grievances. The Commissioners made their
+ report opposing any substantial change. In March, 1837, Lord John Russell,
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer in the Melbourne Ministry, opposed only by a
+ handful of Radical and Irish members, carried through the British
+ Parliament a series of resolutions authorizing the Governor to take from
+ the Treasury without the consent of the Assembly the funds needed for
+ civil administration, offering control of all revenues in return for a
+ permanent civil list, and rejecting absolutely the demands alike for a
+ responsible Executive and for an elective Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ British statesmanship was bankrupt. Its final answer to the demands for
+ redress was to stand pat. Papineau, without seeing what the end would be,
+ held to his course. Younger men, carried away by the passions he had
+ aroused, pushed on still more recklessly. If reform could not be obtained
+ within the British Empire, it must be sought by setting up an independent
+ republic on the St. Lawrence or by annexation to the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Upper Canada, at the same time, matters had come to the verge of
+ rebellion. Sir John Colborne had, just before retiring as Lieutenant
+ Governor in 1836, added fuel to the flames by creating and endowing some
+ forty-four rectories, thus strengthening the grip of the Anglican Church
+ on the province. His successor, Sir Francis Bond Head, was a man of such
+ rash and unbalanced judgment as to lend support to the tradition that he
+ was appointed by mistake for his cousin, Edmund Head, who was made
+ Governor of United Canada twenty years later. He appointed to his
+ Executive Council three Reformers, Baldwin, Rolph, and Dunn, only to make
+ clear by his refusal to consult them his inability to understand their
+ demand for responsible government. All the members of the Executive
+ Council thereupon resigned, and the Assembly refused supplies. Head
+ dissolved the House and appealed to the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weight of executive patronage, the insistence of the Governor that
+ British connection was at stake, the alarms caused by some injudicious
+ statements of Mackenzie and his Radical ally in England, Joseph Hume, and
+ the defection of the Methodists, whose leader, Egerton Ryerson, had
+ quarreled with Mackenzie, resulted in the overwhelming defeat of the
+ Reformers. The sting of defeat, the failure of the Family Compact to carry
+ out their eleventh hour promises of reform, and the passing of Lord John
+ Russell's reactionary resolutions convinced a section of the Reform party,
+ in Upper Canada as well as in Lower Canada, that an appeal to force was
+ the only way out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the end of 1837 armed rebellion broke out in both the Canadas. In
+ both it was merely a flash in the pan. In Lower Canada there had been
+ latterly much use of the phrases of revolution and some drilling, but
+ rebellion was neither definitely planned nor carefully organized. The more
+ extreme leaders of the Patriotes simply drifted into it, and the actual
+ outbreak was a haphazard affair. Alarmed by the sudden and seemingly
+ concerted departure of Papineau and some of his lieutenants, Nelson,
+ Brown, and O'Callaghan, from Montreal, the Government gave orders for
+ their arrest. The petty skirmish that followed on November 16, 1837, was
+ the signal for the rallying of armed habitants around impromptu leaders at
+ various points. The rising was local and spasmodic. The vast body of the
+ habitants stood aloof. The Catholic Church, which earlier had sympathized
+ with Papineau, had parted from him when he developed radical and
+ republican views. Now the strong exhortations of the clergy to the
+ faithful counted for much in keeping peace, and in one view justified the
+ policy of the British Government in seeking to purchase their favor. The
+ Quebec and Three Rivers districts remained quiet. In the Richelieu and
+ Montreal districts, where disaffection was strongest, the habitants lacked
+ leadership, discipline, and touch with other groups, and were armed only
+ with old flintlocks, scythes, or clubs. Here and there a brave and
+ skillful leader, such as Dr. Jean Olivier Chenier, was thrown up by the
+ evidence opened a way out of the difficult situation. A year later Peel
+ and Webster, representing the two countries, exchanged formal
+ explanations, and the incident was closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Upper Canada many a rebel sympathizer lay for months in jail, but only
+ two leaders, Lount and Matthews, both brave men, paid the penalty of death
+ for their failure. In Lower Canada the new Governor General, Lord Durham,
+ proved more clement, merely banishing to Bermuda eight of the captured
+ leaders. When, a year later, after Durham's return to England, a second
+ brief rising broke out under Robert Nelson, it was stamped out in a week,
+ twelve of the ringleaders were executed, and others were deported to
+ Botany Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebellion, it seemed, had failed and failed miserably. Most of the
+ leaders of the extreme factions in both provinces had been discredited,
+ and the moderate men had been driven into the government camp. Yet in one
+ sense the rising proved successful. It was not the first nor the last time
+ that wild and misguided force brought reform where sane and moderate
+ tactics met only contempt. If men were willing to die to redress their
+ wrongs, the most easy-going official could no longer deny that there was a
+ case for inquiry and possibly for reform. Lord Melbourne's Government had
+ acted at once in sending out to Canada, as Governor General and High
+ Commissioner with sweeping powers, one of the ablest men in English public
+ life. Lord Durham was an aristocratic Radical, intensely devoted to
+ political equality and equally convinced of his own personal superiority.
+ Yet he had vision, firmness, independence, and his very rudeness kept him
+ free from the social influences which had ensnared many another Governor.
+ Attended by a gorgeous retinue and by some able working secretaries,
+ including Charles Buller, Carlyle's pupil, he made a rapid survey of Upper
+ and Lower Canada. Suddenly, after five crowded months, his mission ended.
+ He had left at home active enemies and lukewarm friends. Lord Brougham,
+ one of his foes, called in question the legality of his edict banishing
+ the rebel leaders to Bermuda. The Ministers did not back him, as they
+ should have done; and Durham indignantly resigned and hurried back to
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three months later, however, his "Report" appeared and his mission stood
+ vindicated. There are few British state papers of more fame or more worth
+ than Durham's "Report". It was not, however, the beginning and the end of
+ wisdom in colonial policy, as has often been declared. Much that Durham
+ advocated was not new, and much has been condemned by time. His main
+ suggestions were four: to unite the Canadas, to swamp the French Canadians
+ by such union, to grant a measure of responsible government, and to set up
+ municipal government. His attitude towards the French Canadians was
+ prejudiced and shortsighted. He was not the first to recommend responsible
+ government, nor did his approval make it a reality. Yet with all
+ qualifications his "Report" showed a confidence in the liberating and
+ solving power of self-government which was the all-essential thing for the
+ English Government to see; and his reasoned and powerful advocacy gave an
+ impetus and a rallying point to the movement which were to prove of the
+ greatest value in the future growth not only of Canada but of the whole
+ British Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. THE UNION ERA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The struggle for self-government seemed to have ended in deadlock and
+ chaos. Yet under the wreckage new lines of constructive effort were
+ forming. The rebellion had at least proved that the old order was doomed.
+ For half a century the attempt had been made to govern the Canadas as
+ separate provinces and with the half measure of freedom involved in
+ representative government. For the next quarter of a century the
+ experiment of responsible government together with union of the two
+ provinces was to be given its trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The union of the two provinces was the phase of Durham's policy which met
+ fullest acceptance in England. It was not possible, in the view of the
+ British Ministry, to take away permanently from the people of Lower Canada
+ the measure of self-government involved in permitting them to choose their
+ representatives in a House of Assembly. It was equally impossible, they
+ considered, to permit a French-Canadian majority ever again to bring all
+ government to a standstill. The only solution of the problem was to unite
+ the two provinces and thus swamp the French Canadians by an English
+ majority. Lower Canada, Durham had insisted, must be made "an English
+ province." Sooner or later the French Canadians must lose their separate
+ nationality; and it was, he contended, the part of statesmanship to make
+ it sooner. Union, moreover, would make possible a common financial policy
+ and an energetic development of the resources of both provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the first task set Durham's successor, Charles Poulett Thomson,
+ better known as Lord Sydenham. Like Durham he was a man of outstanding
+ capacity. The British Government had learned at last to send men of the
+ caliber the emergency demanded. Like Durham he was a wealthy Radical
+ politician, but there the resemblance ended. Where Durham played the
+ dictator, Sydenham preferred to intrigue and to manage men, to win them by
+ his adroitness and to convince them by his energy and his business
+ knowledge. He was well fitted for the transition tasks before him, though
+ too masterful to fill the role of ornamental monarch which the advocates
+ of responsible government had cast for the Governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sydenham reached Canada in October, 1839. With the assistance of James
+ Stuart, now a baronet and Chief Justice of Lower Canada, he drafted a
+ union measure. In Lower Canada the Assembly had been suspended, and the
+ Special Council appointed in its stead accepted the bill without serious
+ demur. More difficulty was found in Upper Canada, where the Family
+ Compact, still entrenched in the Legislative Council, feared the risk to
+ their own position that union would bring and shrank from the task of
+ assimilating half a million disaffected French Canadians. But with the
+ support of the Reformers and of the more moderate among the Family Compact
+ party, Sydenham forced his measure through. A confirming bill passed the
+ British Parliament; and on February 10, 1841, the Union of Canada was
+ proclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Act provided for the union of the two provinces, under a Governor, an
+ appointed Legislative Council, and an elective Assembly. In the Assembly
+ each section of the new province was to receive equal representation,
+ though the population of Lower Canada still greatly exceeded that of Upper
+ Canada. The Assembly was to have full control of all revenues, and in
+ return a permanent civil list was granted. Either English or French could
+ be used in debate, but all parliamentary journals and papers were to be
+ printed in English only.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * From 1841 to 1867 the whole province was legally known as
+ the "Province of Canada." Yet a measure of administrative
+ separation between the old sections remained, and the terms
+ "Canada East" and "Canada West" received official sanction.
+ The older terms, "Lower Canada" and "Upper Canada," lingered
+ on in popular usage.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In June, 1841, the first Parliament of united Canada met at Kingston,
+ which as the most central point had been chosen as the new capital. Under
+ Sydenham's shrewd and energetic leadership a business programme of
+ long-delayed reforms was put through. A large loan, guaranteed by the
+ British Government, made possible extensive provision for building roads,
+ bridges, and canals around the rapids in the St. Lawrence. Municipal
+ institutions were set up, and reforms were effected in the provincial
+ administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord John Russell in England and Sydenham in Canada were anxious to keep
+ the question of responsible government in the background. For the first
+ busy months they succeeded, but the new Parliament contained men quite as
+ strong willed as either and of quite other views. Before the first session
+ had begun, Baldwin and the new French-Canadian leader, La Fontaine, had
+ raised the issue and begun a new struggle in which their single-minded
+ devotion and unflinching courage were to attain a complete success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Responsible government was in 1841 only a phrase, a watchword. Its full
+ implications became clear only after many years. It meant three things:
+ cabinet government, self-government, and party government. It meant that
+ the government of the country should be carried on by a Cabinet or
+ Executive Council, all members of Parliament, all belonging to the party
+ which had the majority in the Assembly, and under the leadership of a
+ Prime Minister, the working head of the Government. The nominal head,
+ Governor or King, could act only on the advice of his ministers, who alone
+ were held responsible to Parliament for the course of the Government. It
+ meant, further, national self-government. The Governor could not serve two
+ masters. If he must take the advice of his ministers in Canada, he could
+ not take the possibly conflicting advice of ministers in London. The
+ people of Canada would be the ultimate court of appeal. And finally,
+ responsible government meant party government. The cabinet system
+ presupposed a definite and united majority behind the Government. It was
+ the business of the party system to provide that majority, to insure
+ responsible and steady action, and at the same time responsible criticism
+ from Her Majesty's loyal Opposition. Baldwin saw this clearly in 1841, but
+ it took hard fighting throughout the forties to bring all his fellow
+ countrymen to see likewise and to induce the English Government to resign
+ itself to the prospect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sydenham fought against responsible government but advanced it against his
+ will. The only sense in which he, like Russell, was prepared to concede
+ such liberty was that the Governor should choose his advisers as far as
+ possible from men having the confidence of the Assembly. They were to be
+ his advisers only, in fact as well as form. The Governor was still to
+ govern, was to be Prime Minister and Governor in one. When Baldwin, who
+ had been given a seat in the Executive Council, demanded in 1841 that this
+ body should be reconstructed in such a way as to include some
+ French-Canadian members and to exclude the Family Compact men, Sydenham
+ flatly refused. Baldwin then resigned and went into opposition, but
+ Sydenham unwillingly played into his hand. By choosing his council solely
+ from members of the two Houses, he established a definite connection
+ between Executive and Assembly and thus gave an opportunity for the
+ discussion of the administration of policy in the House and for the
+ forming of government and opposition parties. Before the first session
+ closed, the majority which Sydenham had built up by acting as a party
+ leader at the very time he was deriding parties as mere factions, crumbled
+ away, and he was forced to accept resolutions insisting that the
+ Governor's advisers must be men "possessed of the confidence of the
+ representatives of the people." Fate ended his work at its height. Riding
+ home one September evening, he was thrown from his horse and died from the
+ injuries before the month was out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It fell to the Tory Government of Peel to choose Sydenham's successor.
+ They named Sir Charles Bagot, already distinguished for his career in
+ diplomacy and known for his hand in matters which were to interest the
+ greater Canada, the Rush-Bagot Convention with the United States and the
+ treaty with Russia which fixed, only too vaguely, the boundaries of
+ Alaska. He was under strict injunctions from the Colonial Secretary, Lord
+ Stanley, to continue Sydenham's policy and to make no further concession
+ to the demands for responsible government or party control. Yet this Tory
+ nominee of a Tory Cabinet, in his brief term of office, insured a great
+ advance along this very path toward freedom. His easy-going temper
+ predisposed him to play the part of constitutional monarch rather than of
+ Prime Minister, and in any case he faced a majority in the Assembly
+ resolute in its determination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of swamping French influence had already proved a failure.
+ Sydenham had given it a full trial. He had done his best, or his worst, by
+ unscrupulous manipulation, to keep the French Canadians from gaining their
+ fair quota of the members in the Union Assembly. Those who were elected he
+ ignored. "They have forgotten nothing and learnt nothing by the
+ Rebellion," he declared, "and are more unfit for representative government
+ than they were in 1791." This was far from a true reading of the
+ situation. The French stood aloof, it is true, a compact and sullen group,
+ angered by the undisguised policy of Anglicization that faced them and by
+ Sydenham's unscrupulous tactics. But they had learned restraint and had
+ found leaders and allies of the kind most needed. Papineau's place&mdash;for
+ the great tribune was now in exile in Paris, consorting with the
+ republicans and socialists who were to bring about the Revolution of 1848&mdash;had
+ been taken by one of his former lieutenants. Louis Hippolyte La Fontaine
+ still stands out as one of the two or three greatest Canadians of French
+ descent, a man of massive intellect, of unquestioned integrity, and of
+ firm but moderate temper. With Baldwin he came to form a close and
+ lifelong friendship. The Reformers of Canada West, as Upper Canada was now
+ called, formed a working alliance with La Fontaine which gave them a
+ sweeping majority in the Assembly. Bagot bowed to the inevitable and
+ called La Fontaine and Baldwin to his Council. Ill health made it
+ impossible for him to take much part in the government, and the Council
+ was far on the way to obtaining the unity and the independence of a true
+ Cabinet when Bagot's death in 1843 brought a new turn in affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Ministers had seen with growing uneasiness Bagot's
+ concessions. His successor, Sir Charles Metcalfe, a man of honest and
+ kindly ways but accustomed to governing oriental peoples, determined to
+ make a stand against the pretensions of the Reformers. In this attitude he
+ was strongly backed both by Stanley and by his successor, that brilliant
+ young Tory, William Ewart Gladstone. Metcalfe insisted once more that the
+ Governor must govern. While the members of the Council, as individuals,
+ might give him advice, it was for him to decide whether or not to take it.
+ The inevitable clash with his Ministers came in the autumn of 1843 over a
+ question of patronage. They resigned, and after months of effort Metcalfe
+ patched up a Ministry with W. H. Draper as the leading member. In an
+ election in which Metcalfe himself took the platform and in which once
+ more British connection was said to be at stake, the Ministry obtained a
+ narrow majority. But opinion soon turned, and when Metcalfe, the third
+ Governor in four years to whom Canada had proved fatal, went home to die,
+ he knew that his stand had been in vain. The Ministry, after a precarious
+ life of three years, went to the country only to be beaten by an
+ overwhelming majority in both East and West. When, in 1848, Baldwin and La
+ Fontaine were called to office under the new Governor General, Lord Elgin,
+ the fight was won. Many years were to pass before the full implications of
+ responsible government were worked out, but henceforth even the straitest
+ Tory conceded the principle. Responsible government had ceased to be a
+ party cry and had become the common heritage of all Canadians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Elgin, who was Durham's son-in-law, was a man well able to bear the
+ mantle of his predecessors. Yet he realized that the day had passed when
+ Governors could govern and was content rather to advise his advisers, to
+ wield the personal influence that his experience and sagacity warranted.
+ Hitherto the stages in Canadian history had been recorded by the term of
+ office of the Governors; henceforth it was to be the tenure of Cabinets
+ which counted. Elgin ceased even to attend the Council, and after his time
+ the Governor became more and more the constitutional monarch, busied in
+ laying corner stones and listening to tiresome official addresses. In
+ emergencies, and especially in the gap or interregnum between Ministries,
+ the personality of the Governor might count, but as a rule this power
+ remained latent. Yet in two turning points in Canadian history, both of
+ which had to do with the relations of Canada to the United States, Elgin
+ was to play an important part: the Annexation Movement of 1849 and the
+ Reciprocity Treaty of 1854.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the struggle for responsible government, loyalty to the British Crown,
+ loyalty of a superior and exclusive brand, had been the creed and the war
+ cry of the Tory party. Yet in 1849 men saw the hotheads of this group in
+ Montreal stoning a British Governor General and setting fire to the
+ Parliament Buildings, while a few months later their elders issued a
+ manifesto urging the annexation of Canada to the United States. Why this
+ sudden shift? Simply because the old colonial system they had known and
+ supported had come to an end. The Empire had been taken to mean racial
+ ascendancy and trade profit. Now both the political and the economic
+ pillars were crumbling, and the Empire appeared to have no further excuse
+ for existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the past British connection had meant to many of the English minority
+ in Lower Canada a means of redressing the political balance, of retaining
+ power in face of a body of French-speaking citizens outnumbering them
+ three or four to one. Now that support had been withdrawn. Britain had
+ consented, unwillingly, to the setting up of responsible government and
+ the calling to office of men who a dozen years before had been in arms
+ against the Queen or fleeing from the province. This was gall and wormwood
+ to the English. But when the Ministry introduced, and the Assembly passed,
+ the Rebellion Losses Bill for compensating those who had suffered
+ destruction of property in the outbreak, and when the terms were so drawn
+ as to make it possible, its critics charged, that rebels as well as
+ loyalists would be compensated, flesh and blood could bear no more. The
+ Governor was pelted with rotten eggs when he came down to the House to
+ sign the bill, and the buildings where Parliament had met since 1844, when
+ the capital had been transferred from Kingston to Montreal, were stormed
+ and burned by a street mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The anger felt against the Ministry thus turned against the British
+ Government. The English minority felt like an advance guard in a hostile
+ country, deserted by the main forces, an Ulster abandoned to Home Ruler
+ and Sinn Feiner. They turned to the south, to the other great
+ English-speaking Protestant people. If the older branch of the race would
+ not give them protection or a share in dominance, perhaps the younger
+ branch could and would. As Lord Durham had suggested, they were resolved
+ that "Lower Canada must be ENGLISH, at the expense, if necessary, of not
+ being BRITISH."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not only the political basis of the old colonial system that
+ was rudely shattered. The economic foundations, too, were passing away,
+ and with them the profits of the Montreal merchants, who formed the
+ backbone of the annexation movement. It has been seen that under this
+ system Great Britain had aimed at setting up a self-contained empire, with
+ a monopoly of the markets of the colonies. Now for her own sake she was
+ sweeping away the tariff and shipping monopoly which had been built up
+ through more than two centuries. The logic of Adam Smith, the experiments
+ of Huskisson, the demands of manufacturers for cheap food and raw
+ materials, the passionate campaigns of Cobden and Bright, and the rains
+ that brought the Irish famine, at last had their effect. In 1846 Peel
+ himself undertook the repeal of the Corn Laws. To Lower Canada this was a
+ crushing blow. Until of late the preference given in the British market on
+ colonial goods in return for the control of colonial trade had been of
+ little value; but in 1848 the duties on Canadian wheat and flour had been
+ greatly lowered, resulting in a preference over foreign grain reckoned at
+ eighteen cents a bushel. While in appearance an extension of the old
+ system of preference and protection, in reality this was a step toward its
+ abandonment. For it was understood that American grain, imported into
+ Canada at a low duty, whether shipped direct or ground into flour, would
+ be admitted at the same low rates. The Act, by opening a back door to
+ United States wheat, foreshadowed the triumph of the cheap food agitators
+ in England. But the merchants, the millers, and the forwarders of Montreal
+ could not believe this. The canal system was rushed through; large flour
+ mills were built, and heavy investments of capital were made. Then in 1846
+ came the announcement that the artificial basis of this brief prosperity
+ had vanished. Lord Elgin summed up the results in a dispatch in 1849:
+ "Property in most of the Canadian towns, and more especially in the
+ capital, has fallen fifty per cent in value within the last three years.
+ Three-fourths of the commercial men are bankrupt, owing to free trade. A
+ large proportion of the exportable produce of Canada is obliged to seek a
+ market in the United States. It pays a duty of twenty per cent on the
+ frontier. How long can such a state of things endure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In October, 1849, the leading men of Montreal issued a manifesto demanding
+ annexation to the United States. A future Prime Minister of Canada, J. J.
+ C. Abbott, four future Cabinet Ministers, John Rose, Luther Holton, D. L.
+ Macpherson, and A. A. Dorion, and the commercial leaders of Montreal, the
+ Molsons, Redpaths, Torrances, and Workmans, were among the signers.
+ Besides Dorion, a few French Canadians of the Rouge or extreme Radical
+ party joined in. The movement found supporters in the Eastern Townships,
+ notably in A. T. Galt, a financier and railroad builder of distinction,
+ and here and there in Canada West. Yet the great body of opinion was
+ unmistakably against it. Baldwin and La Fontaine opposed it with
+ unswerving energy, the Catholic Church in Canada East denounced it, and
+ the rank and file of both parties in Canada West gave it short shrift.
+ Elgin came out actively in opposition and aided in negotiating the
+ Reciprocity Treaty with the United States which met the economic need.
+ Montreal found itself isolated, and even there the revival of trade and
+ the cooling of passions turned men's thoughts into other channels. Soon
+ the movement was but a memory, chiefly serviceable to political opponents
+ for taunting some signer of the manifesto whenever he later made parade of
+ his loyalty. It had a more unfortunate effect, however, in leading public
+ opinion in the United States to the belief for many years that a strong
+ annexationist sentiment existed in Canada. Never again did annexation
+ receive any notable measure of popular support. A national spirit was
+ slowly gaining ground, and men were eventually to see that the alternative
+ to looking to London for salvation was not looking to Washington but
+ looking to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the provinces by the sea the struggle for responsible government was
+ won at much the same time as in Canada. The smaller field within which the
+ contest was waged gave it a bitter personal touch; but racial hostility
+ did not enter in, and the British Government proved less obdurate than in
+ the western conflicts. In both Nova Scotia and New Brunswick little
+ oligarchies had become entrenched. The Government was unprogressive, and
+ fees and salaries were high. The Anglican Church had received privileges
+ galling to other denominations which surpassed it in numbers. The "powers
+ that were" found a shrewd defender in Haliburton, who tried to teach his
+ fellow Bluenoses through the homely wit of "Sam Slick" that they should
+ leave governing to those who had the training, the capacity, and the
+ leisure it required. In Prince Edward Island the land question still
+ overshadowed all others. Every proposal for its settlement was rejected by
+ the influence of the absentee landlords in England, and the agitation went
+ wearily on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Nova Scotia the outstanding figure in the ranks of reform was Joseph
+ Howe. The son of a Loyalist settler, Howe early took to his father's work
+ of journalism. At first his sympathies were with the governing powers, but
+ a controversy with a brother editor, Jotham Blanchard, a New Hampshire man
+ who found radical backing among the Scots of Pictou, gave him new light
+ and he soon threw his whole powers into the struggle on the popular side.
+ Howe was a man lavishly gifted, one of the most effective orators America
+ has produced, fearing no man and no task however great, filled with a
+ vitality, a humor, a broad sympathy for his fellows that gave him the
+ blind obedience of thousands of followers and the glowing friendship of
+ countless firesides. There are still old men in Nova Scotia whose proudest
+ memory is that they once held Howe's horse or ran on an errand for a look
+ from his kingly eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howe took up the fight in earnest in 1835. The western demand for
+ responsible government pointed the way, and Howe became, with Baldwin, its
+ most trenchant advocate. In spite of the determined opposition of the
+ sturdy old soldier Governor, Sir Colin Campbell, and of his successor,
+ Lord Falkland, who aped Sydenham and whom Howe threatened to "hire a black
+ man to horse-whip," the reformers won. In 1848 the first responsible
+ Cabinet in Nova Scotia came to power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In New Brunswick the transition to responsible government came gradually
+ and without dramatic incidents or brilliant figures on either side. Lemuel
+ Wilmot, and later Charles Fisher, led the reform ranks, gradually securing
+ for the Assembly control of all revenues, abolishing religious
+ inequalities, and effecting some reform in the Executive Council, until at
+ last in 1855 the crowning demand was tardily conceded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the Great Lakes to the Atlantic the political fight was won, and men
+ turned with relief to the tasks which strife and faction had hindered.
+ Self-government meant progressive government. With organized Cabinets
+ coordinating and controlling their policy the provinces went ahead much
+ faster than when Governor and Assembly stood at daggers drawn. The forties
+ and especially the fifties were years of rapid and sound development in
+ all the provinces, and especially in Canada West. Settlers poured in, the
+ scattered clearings; widened until one joined the next, and pioneer
+ hardships gave way to substantial, if crude, prosperity. Education,
+ notably under the vigorous leadership of Egerton Ryerson in Canada West,
+ received more adequate attention. Banks grew and with them all commercial
+ facilities increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distinctive feature of this period of Canadian development, however,
+ was the growth of canals and railroads. The forties were the time of canal
+ building and rebuilding all along the lakes and the St. Lawrence to salt
+ water. Canada spent millions on what were wonderful works for their day,
+ in the hope that the St. Lawrence would become the channel for the trade
+ of all the growing western States bordering on the Great Lakes. Scarcely
+ were these waterway improvements completed when it was realized they had
+ been made largely in vain. The railway had come and was outrivaling the
+ canal. If Canadian ports and channels were even to hold their own, they
+ must take heed of the enterprise of all the cities along the Atlantic
+ coast of the United States, which were promoting railroads to the interior
+ in a vigorous rivalry for the trade of the Golden West. Here was a
+ challenge which must be taken up. The fifties became the first great
+ railway era of Canada. In 1850 there were only sixty-six miles of railway
+ in all the provinces; ten years later there were over two thousand. Nearly
+ all the roads were aided by provincial or municipal bonus or guarantee.
+ Chief among the lines was the Grand Trunk, which ran from the Detroit
+ border to Riviere du Loup on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and which, though
+ it halted at that eastern terminus in the magnificent project of
+ connecting with the railways of the Maritime Provinces, was nevertheless
+ at that time the longest road in the world operating under single control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The railways brought with them a new speculative fever, a more complex
+ financial structure, a business politics which shaded into open
+ corruption, and a closer touch with the outside world. The general
+ substitution of steam for sail on the Atlantic during this period aided
+ further in lessening the isolation of what had been backwoods provinces
+ and in bringing them into closer relation with the rest of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in closer relations with the United States that this emergence from
+ isolation chiefly manifested itself. In the generation that followed the
+ War of 1812 intercourse with the United States was discouraged and was
+ remarkably insignificant. Official policy and the memories of 1783 and
+ 1812 alike built up a wall along the southern border. The spirit of
+ Downing Street was shown in the instructions given to Lord Bathurst,
+ immediately after the close of the war, to leave the territory between
+ Montreal and Lake Champlain in a state of nature, making no further grants
+ of land and letting the few roads which had been begun fall into decay
+ thus a barrier of forest wilderness would ward off republican contagion.
+ This Chinese policy of putting up a wall of separation proved impossible
+ to carry through, but in less extreme ways this attitude of aloofness
+ marked the course of the Government all through the days of oversea
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friction aroused by repeated boundary disputes prevented friendly
+ relations between Canada and the United States. With unconscious irony the
+ framers of the Peace of 1783 had prefaced their long outline of the
+ boundaries of the United States by expressing their intention "that all
+ disputes which might arise in future on the subject of the boundaries of
+ the said United States may be prevented." So vague, however, were the
+ terms of the treaty and so untrustworthy were the maps of the day that
+ ultimately almost every clause in the boundary section gave rise to
+ dispute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As settlement rolled westward one section of the boundary after another
+ came in question. Beginning in the east, the line between New Brunswick
+ and New England was to be formed by the St. Croix River. There had been a
+ St. Croix in Champlain's time and a St. Croix was depicted on the maps,
+ but no river known by that name existed in 1783. The British identified it
+ with the Schoodic, the Americans with the Magaguadavic. Arbitration in
+ 1798 upheld the British in the contention that the Schoodic was the St.
+ Croix but agreed with the Americans in the secondary question as to which
+ of the two branches of the Schoodic should be followed. A similar
+ commission in 1817 settled the dispute as to the islands in Passamaquoddy
+ Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More difficult, because at once more ambiguous in terms and more vitally
+ important, was the determination of the boundary in the next stage
+ westward from the St. Croix to the St. Lawrence. The British position was
+ a difficult one to maintain. In the days of the struggle with France,
+ Great Britain had tried to push the bounds of the New England colonies as
+ far north as might be, making claims that would hem in France to the
+ barest strip along the south shore of the St. Lawrence. Now that she was
+ heir to the territories and claims of France and had lost her own old
+ colonies, it was somewhat embarrassing, but for diplomats not impossible,
+ to have to urge a line as far south as the urgent needs of the provinces
+ for intercommunication demanded. The letter of the treaty was impossible
+ to interpret with certainty. The phrase, "the Highlands which divide those
+ rivers that empty themselves into the river St. Lawrence from those which
+ fall into the Atlantic Ocean," meant according to the American reading a
+ watershed which was a marshy plateau, and according to the British version
+ a range of hills to the south which involved some keen hairsplitting as to
+ the rivers they divided. The intentions of the parties to the original
+ treaty were probably much as the Americans contended. From the standpoint
+ of neighborly adjustment and the relative need for the land in question, a
+ strong case in equity could be made out for the provinces, which would be
+ cut asunder for all time if a wedge were driven north to the very brink of
+ the St. Lawrence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As lumbermen and settlers gathered in the border area, the risk of
+ conflict became acute, culminating in the Aroostook War in 1838-39, when
+ the Legislatures of Maine and New Brunswick backed their rival lumberjacks
+ with reckless jingoism. Diplomacy failed repeatedly to obtain a compromise
+ line. Arbitration was tried with little better success, as the United
+ States refused to accept the award of the King of the Netherlands in 1831.
+ The diplomats tried once more, and in 1842 Daniel Webster, the United
+ States Secretary of State, and Lord Ashburton, the British Commissioner,
+ made a compromise by which some five thousand miles of the area in dispute
+ were assigned to Great Britain and seven thousand to the United States.
+ The award was not popular on either side, and the public seized eagerly on
+ stories of concealed "Red Line" maps, stories of Yankee smartness or of
+ British trickery. Webster, to win the assent of Maine, had exhibited in
+ the Senate a map found in the French Archives and very damaging to the
+ American claim. Later it appeared that the British Government also had
+ found a map equally damaging to its own claims. The nice question of
+ ethics involved, whether a nation should bring forward evidence that would
+ tell against itself, ceased to have more than an abstract interest when it
+ was demonstrated that neither map could be considered as one which the
+ original negotiators had used or marked.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Path, of Empire", by Carl Russell Fish (in "The
+ Chronicles of America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The boundary from the St. Lawrence westward through the Great Lakes and
+ thence to the Lake of the Woods had been laid down in the Treaty of 1783
+ in the usual vague terms, but it was determined in a series of
+ negotiations from 1794 to 1842 with less friction and heat than the
+ eastern line had caused. From the Lake of the Woods to the Rockies a new
+ line, the forty-ninth parallel, was agreed upon in 1818. Then, as the
+ Pacific Ocean was neared, the difficulties once more increased. There were
+ no treaties between the two countries to limit claims beyond the Rockies.
+ Discovery and settlement, and the rights inherited from or admitted by the
+ Spaniards to the south and by the Russians to the north, were the grounds
+ put forward. British and Canadian fur traders had been the pioneers in
+ overland discovery, but early in the forties thousands of American
+ settlers poured into the Columbia Valley and strengthened the practical
+ case for their country. "Fifty-four forty or fight"&mdash;in other words,
+ the calm proposal to claim the whole coast between Mexico and Alaska&mdash;became
+ the popular cry in the United States; but in face of the firm attitude of
+ Great Britain and impending hostilities with Mexico, more moderate
+ counsels ruled. Great Britain held out for the Columbia River as the
+ dividing line, and the United States for the forty-ninth parallel
+ throughout. Finally, in 1846, the latter contention was accepted, with a
+ modification to leave Vancouver Island wholly British territory. A
+ postscript to this settlement was added in 1872, when the German Emperor
+ as arbitrator approved the American claim to the island of San Juan in the
+ channel between Vancouver Island and the mainland.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Path of Empire".
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With the most troublesome boundary questions out of the way, it became
+ possible to discuss calmly closer trade relations between the Provinces
+ and the United States. The movement for reciprocal lowering of the tariffs
+ which hampered trade made rapid headway in the Provinces in the late
+ forties and early fifties. British North America was passing out of the
+ pioneer, self-sufficient stage, and now had a surplus to export as well as
+ townbred needs to be supplied by imports. The spread of settlement and the
+ building of canals and railways brought closer contact with the people to
+ the south. The loss of special privileges in the English market made the
+ United States market more desired. In official circles reciprocity was
+ sought as a homeopathic cure for the desire for annexation. William
+ Hamilton Merritt, a Niagara border business man and the most persistent
+ advocate of closer trade relations, met little difficulty in securing
+ almost unanimous backing in Canada, while the Maritime Provinces lent
+ their support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was more difficult to win over the United States. There the people
+ showed the usual indifference of a big and prosperous country to the needs
+ or opportunities of a small and backward neighbor. The division of power
+ between President and Congress made it difficult to carry any negotiation
+ through to success. Yet these obstacles were overcome. The depletion of
+ the fisheries along the Atlantic coast of the United States made it worth
+ while, as I.D. Andrews, a United States consul in New Brunswick, urged
+ persistently, to gain access to the richer grounds to the north and, if
+ necessary, to offer trade concessions in exchange. At Washington, the
+ South was in the saddle. Its sympathies were strongly for freer trade, but
+ this alone would not have counted had not the advocates of reciprocity
+ convinced the Democratic leaders of the bearing of their policy on the
+ then absorbing issue of slavery. If reciprocity were not arranged, the
+ argument ran, annexation would be sure to come and that would mean the
+ addition to the Union of a group of freesoil States which would definitely
+ tilt the balance against slavery for all time. With the ground thus
+ prepared, Lord Elgin succeeded by adroit and capable diplomacy in winning
+ over the leaders of Congress as well as the Executive to his proposals.
+ The Reciprocity Treaty was passed by the Senate in August, 1854, and by
+ the Legislatures of the United Kingdom, Canada, Prince Edward Island, New
+ Brunswick, and Nova Scotia in the next few months, and of Newfoundland in
+ 1855. This treaty provided for free admission into each country of
+ practically all the products of the farm, forest, mine, and fishery, threw
+ open the Atlantic fisheries, and gave American vessels the use of the St.
+ Lawrence and Canadian vessels the use of Lake Michigan. The agreement was
+ to last for ten years and indefinitely thereafter, subject to termination
+ on one year's notice by either party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To both countries reciprocity brought undoubted good. Trade doubled and
+ trebled. Each country gained by free access to the nearest sources of
+ supply. The same goods figured largely in the traffic in both directions,
+ the United States importing grain and flour from Canada and exporting it
+ to the Maritime Provinces. In short the benefits which had come to the
+ United States from free and unfettered trade throughout half a continent
+ were now extended to practically a whole continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet criticism of the new economic regime was not lacking. The growth of
+ protectionist feeling in both countries after 1857 brought about incidents
+ and created an atmosphere which were dangerous to the continuance of close
+ trade relations. In 1858 and 1859 the Canadian Government raised
+ substantially the duties on manufactured goods in order to meet the bills
+ for its lavish railway policy. This increase hit American manufacturers
+ and led to loud complaints that the spirit of the Reciprocity Treaty had
+ been violated. Alexander T. Galt, Canadian Minister of Finance, had no
+ difficulty in showing that the tariff increases were the only feasible
+ sources of revenue, that the agreement with the United States did not
+ cover manufactures, and that the United States itself, faced by war
+ demands and no longer controlled by free trade Southerners, had raised
+ duties still higher. The exports of the United States to the Provinces in
+ the reciprocity period were greater, contrary to the later traditions,
+ than the imports. On economic grounds the case for the continuance of the
+ reciprocity agreement was strong, and probably the treaty would have
+ remained in force indefinitely had not the political passions roused by
+ the Civil War made sanity and neighborliness in trade difficult to
+ maintain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Civil War broke out, the sympathies of Canadians were
+ overwhelmingly on the side of the North. The railway and freer trade had
+ been bringing the two peoples closer together, and time was healing old
+ sores. Slavery was held to be the real issue, and on that issue there were
+ scarcely two opinions in the British Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet in a few months sympathy had given way to angry and suspicious
+ bickering, and the possibility of invasion of Canada by the Northern
+ forces was vigorously debated. This sudden shift of opinion and the danger
+ in which it involved the provinces were both incidents in the quarrel
+ which sprang up between the United States and Great Britain. In Britain as
+ in Canada, opinion, so far as it found open expression, was at first not
+ unfriendly to the North. Then came the anger of the North at Great
+ Britain's legitimate and necessary, though perhaps precipitate, action in
+ acknowledging the South as a belligerent. This action ran counter to the
+ official Northern theory that the revolt of the Southern States was a
+ local riot, of merely domestic concern, and was held to foreshadow a
+ recognition of the independence of the Confederacy. The angry taunts were
+ soon returned. The ruling classes in Great Britain made the discovery that
+ the war was a struggle between chivalrous gentlemen and mercenary
+ counterhoppers and cherished the hope that the failure of the North would
+ discredit, the world over, the democracy which was making uncomfortable
+ claims in England itself. The English trading classes resented the
+ shortage of cotton and the high duties which the protectionist North was
+ imposing. With the defeat of the Union forces at Bull Run the prudent
+ hesitancy of aristocrat and merchant in expressing their views
+ disappeared. The responsible statesmen of both countries, especially
+ Lincoln and Lord John Russell, refused to be stampeded, but unfortunately
+ the leading newspapers served them ill. The "Times", with its constant
+ sneers and its still more irritating patronizing advice, and the New York
+ "Herald", bragging and blustering in the frank hope of forcing a war with
+ Britain and France which would reunite South and North and subordinate the
+ slavery issue, did more than any other factors to bring the two countries
+ to the verge of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Canada the tendency in some quarters to reflect English opinion, the
+ disappointment in others that the abolition of slavery was not explicitly
+ pledged by the North, and above all resentment against the threats of the
+ "Herald" and its followers, soon cooled the early friendliness. The
+ leading Canadian newspaper, for many years a vigorous opponent of slavery,
+ thus summed up the situation in August, 1861:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The insolent bravado of the Northern press towards Great Britain and the
+ insulting tone assumed toward these Provinces have unquestionably produced
+ a marked change in the feelings of our people. When the war commenced,
+ there was only one feeling, of hearty sympathy with the North, but now it
+ is very different. People have lost sight of the character of the struggle
+ in the exasperation excited by the injustice and abuse showered upon us by
+ the party with which we sympathized."*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Toronto "Globe", August 7, 1861.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Trent affair brought matters to a sobering climax.* When it was
+ settled, resentment lingered, but the tension was never again so acute.
+ Both Great Britain and in Canada the normal sympathy with the cause of the
+ Union revived as the war went on. In England the classes continued to be
+ pro-Southern in sympathy, but the masses, in spite of cotton famines, held
+ resolutely to their faith in the cause of freedom. After Lincoln's
+ emancipation of the slaves, the view of the English middle classes more
+ and more became the view of the nation. In Canada, pro-Southern sentiment
+ was strong in the same classes and particularly in Montreal and Toronto,
+ where there were to be found many Southern refugees, some of whom made a
+ poor return for hospitality by endeavoring to use Canada as a base for
+ border raids. Yet in the smaller towns and in the country sympathy was
+ decidedly on the other side, particularly after the "Herald" had ceased
+ its campaign of bluster and after Lincoln's proclamation had brought the
+ moral issue again to the fore. The fact that a large number of Canadians,
+ popularly set at forty thousand, enlisted in the Northern armies, is to be
+ explained in part by the call of adventure and the lure of high bounties,
+ but it must also be taken to reflect the sympathy of the mass of the
+ people.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "Abraham Lincoln and the Union", by Nathaniel W.
+ Stephenson (in "The Chronicles of America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the United States resentment was slower in passing. While the war was
+ on, prudence forbade any overt act. When it was over, the bill for the
+ Alabama raids and the taunts of the "Times" came in. Great Britain paid in
+ the settlement of the Alabama claims.* Canada suffered by the abrogation
+ of the Reciprocity Treaty at the first possible date, and by the
+ connivance of the American authorities in the Fenian raids of 1866 and
+ 1870. Yet for Canada the outcome was by no means ill. If the Civil War did
+ not bring forth a new nation in the South, it helped to make one in the
+ far North. A common danger drew the scattered British Provinces together
+ and made ready the way for the coming Dominion of Canada.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *See "The Day of the Confederacy", by Nathaniel W.
+ Stephenson; and "The Path of Empire" (in "The Chronicles of
+ America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not from the United States alone that an impetus came for the
+ closer union of the British Provinces. The same period and the same events
+ ripened opinion in the United Kingdom in favor of some practical means of
+ altering a colonial relationship which had ceased to bring profit but
+ which had not ceased to be a burden of responsibility and risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British Empire had its beginning in the initiative of private business
+ men, not in any conscious policy of state. Yet as the Empire grew the
+ teaching of doctrinaires and the example of other colonial powers had
+ developed a definite policy whereby the plantations overseas were to be
+ made to serve the needs of the nation at home. The end of empire was
+ commercial profit; the means, the political subordination of the colonies;
+ the debit entry, the cost of the military and naval and diplomatic
+ services borne by the mother country. But the course of events had now
+ broken down this theory. Britain, for her own good, had abandoned
+ protection, and with it fell the system of preference and monopoly in
+ colonial markets. Not only preference had gone but even equality. The
+ colonies, notably Canada, which was most influenced by the United States,
+ were perversely using their new found freedom to protect their own
+ manufacturers against all outsiders, Britain included. When Sheffield
+ cutlers, hard hit by Canada's tariff, protested to the Colonial Secretary
+ and he echoed their remonstrance, the Canadian Minister of Finance, A. T.
+ Galt, stoutly refused to heed. "Self-government would be utterly
+ annihilated," Galt replied in 1860, "if the views of the Imperial
+ Government were to be preferred to those of the people of Canada. It is
+ therefore the duty of the present government distinctly to affirm the
+ right of the Canadian legislature to adjust the taxation of the people in
+ the way they deem best&mdash;even if it should unfortunately happen to
+ meet the disapproval of the Imperial Ministry." Clearly, if trade
+ advantage were the chief purpose of empire, the Empire had lost its reason
+ for being.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the credit entry fading, the debit entry loomed up bigger. Hardly had
+ the Corn Laws been abolished when Radical critics called on the British
+ Government to withdraw the redcoat garrisons from the colonies: no profit,
+ no defense. Slowly but steadily this reduction was effected. To fill the
+ gaps, the colonies began to strengthen their militia forces. In Canada
+ only a beginning had been made in the way of defense when the Trent
+ episode brought matters to a crisis. If war broke out between the United
+ States and Great Britain, Canada would be the battlefield. Every Canadian
+ knew it; nothing could be clearer. When the danger of immediate war had
+ passed, the Parliament of Canada turned to the provision of more adequate
+ defense. A bill providing for a compulsory levy was defeated in 1862, more
+ on personal and party grounds than on its own merits, and the Ministry
+ next in office took the other course of increasing the volunteer force and
+ of providing for officers' training. Compared with any earlier
+ arrangements for defense, the new plans marked a great advance; but when
+ judged in the light of the possible necessity of repelling American
+ invasion, they were plainly inadequate. A burst of criticism followed from
+ England; press and politicians joined in denouncing the blind and supine
+ colonials. Did they not know that invasion by the United States was
+ inevitable? "If the people of the North fail," declared a noble lord,
+ "they will attack Canada as a compensation for their losses; if they
+ succeed, they will attack Canada in the drunkenness of victory." If such
+ an invasion came, Britain had neither the power nor the will, the "Times"
+ declared, to protect Canada without any aid on her part; not the power,
+ for "our empire is too vast, our population too small, our antagonist too
+ powerful"; not the will, for "we no longer monopolize the trade of the
+ colonies; we no longer job their patronage." To these amazing attacks
+ Canadians replied that they knew the United States better than Englishmen
+ did. They were prepared to take their share in defense, but they could not
+ forget that if war came it would not be by any act of Canada. It was soon
+ noted that those who most loudly denounced Canada for not arming to the
+ teeth were the Southern sympathizers. "The 'Times' has done more than its
+ share in creating bad feeling between England and the United States,"
+ declared a Toronto newspaper, "and would have liked to see the Canadians
+ take up the quarrel which it has raised.... We have no idea of Canada
+ being made a victim of the Jefferson Bricks on either side of the
+ Atlantic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question of defense fell into the background when the war ended and
+ the armies of the Union went back to their farms and shops. But the
+ discussion left in the minds of most Englishmen the belief that the
+ possession of such colonies was a doubtful blessing. Manchester men like
+ Bright, Liberals like Gladstone and Cornewall Lewis, Conservatives like
+ Lowe and Disraeli, all came to believe that separation was only a question
+ of time. Yet honor made them hesitate to set the defenseless colonies
+ adrift to be seized by the first hungry neighbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this juncture the plans for uniting all the colonies in one great
+ federation seemed to open a way out; united, the colonies could stand
+ alone. Thus Confederation found support in Britain as well as a stimulus
+ from the United States. This, however, was not enough. Confederation would
+ not have come when it did&mdash;and that might have meant it would never
+ have come at all&mdash;had not party and sectional deadlock forced
+ Canadian politicians to seek a remedy in a wider union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first all had gone well with the Union of 1841. It did not take the
+ politicians long to learn how to use the power that responsible government
+ put into their hands. After Elgin's day the Governor General fell back
+ into the role of constitutional monarch which cabinet control made easy
+ for him. In the forties, men had spoken of Sydenham and Bagot, Metcalfe
+ and Elgin; in the fifties, they spoke of Baldwin and La Fontaine, Hincks
+ and Macdonald and Cartier and Brown, and less and less of the Governors in
+ whose name these men ruled. Politics then attracted more of the country's
+ ablest men than it does now, and the party leaders included many who would
+ have made their mark in any parliament in the world. Baldwin and La
+ Fontaine, united to the end, resigned office in 1851, believing that they
+ had played their part in establishing responsible government and feeling
+ out of touch with the radical elements of their following who were
+ demanding further change. Their place was taken in Canada West by Hincks,
+ an adroit tactician and a skilled financier, intent on railway building
+ and trade development; and in Canada East by Morin, a somewhat colorless
+ lieutenant of La Fontaine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these leaders in turn soon gave way to new men; and the political
+ parties gradually fell into a state of flux. In Canada West there were
+ still a few Tories, survivors of the Family Compact and last-ditch
+ defenders of privilege in Church and State, a growing number of moderate
+ Conservatives, a larger group of moderate Liberals, and a small but
+ aggressive extreme left wing of "Clear Grits," mainly Scotch
+ Presbyterians, foes of any claim to undue power on the part of class or
+ clergy. In Canada East the English members from the Townships, under A. T.
+ Galt, were ceasing to vote as a unit, and the main body of French-Canadian
+ members were breaking up into a moderate Liberal party, and a smaller
+ group of Rouges, fiery young men under the leadership of Papineau, now
+ returned from exile, were crusading against clerical pretensions and all
+ the established order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was one made to the hand of a master tactician. The time
+ brought forth the man. John A. Macdonald, a young Kingston lawyer of Tory
+ upbringing, or "John A.", as generation after generation affectionately
+ called him, was to prove the greatest leader of men in Canada's annals.
+ Shrewd, tactful, and genial, never forgetting a face or a favor, as
+ popular for his human frailties as for his strength, Macdonald saw that
+ the old party lines drawn in the days of the struggle for responsible
+ government were breaking down and that the future lay with a union of the
+ moderate elements in both parties and both sections. He succeeded in 1854
+ in bringing together in Canada West a strong Liberal-Conservative group
+ and in effecting a permanent alliance with the main body of
+ French-Canadian Liberals, now under the leadership of Cartier, a vigorous
+ fighter and an easy-going opportunist. With the addition of Galt as the
+ financial expert, these allies held power throughout the greater part of
+ the next dozen years. Their position was not unchallenged. The Clear Grits
+ had found a leader after their own heart in George Brown, a Scotchman of
+ great ability, a hard hitter and a good hater&mdash;especially of slavery,
+ the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and "John A." Through his newspaper, the
+ Toronto "Globe", he wielded a power unique in Canadian journalism. The
+ Rouges, now led by A. A. Dorion, a man of stainless honor and essentially
+ moderate temper, withdrew from. their extreme anticlerical position but
+ could not live down their youth or make head against the forces of
+ conservatism in their province. They did not command many votes in the
+ House, but every man of them was an orator, and they remained through all
+ vicissitudes a power to reckon with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Step by step, under Liberal and under Liberal Conservative Governments,
+ the programme of Canadian Liberalism was carried into effect.
+ Self-government, at least in domestic affairs, had been attained. An
+ effective system of municipal government and a good beginning in popular
+ education followed. The last link between Church and State was severed in
+ 1854 when the Clergy Reserves were turned over to the municipalities for
+ secular purposes, with life annuities for clergymen who had been receiving
+ stipends from the Reserves. In Lower Canada the remnants of the old feudal
+ system, the rights of the seigneurs, were abolished in the same year with
+ full compensation from the state. An elective upper Chamber took the place
+ of the appointed Legislative Council a year later. The Reformers, as the
+ Clear Grits preferred to call themselves officially, should perhaps have
+ been content with so much progress. They insisted, however, that a new and
+ more intolerable privilege had arisen&mdash;the privilege which Canada
+ East held of equal representation in the Legislative Assembly long after
+ its population had fallen behind that of Canada West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political union of the two Canadas in fact had never been complete.
+ Throughout the Union period there were two leaders in each Cabinet, two
+ Attorney Generals, and two distinct judicial systems. Every session laws
+ were passed applying to one section alone. This continued separation had
+ its beginning in a clause of the Union Act itself, which provided that
+ each section should have equal representation in the Assembly, even though
+ Lower Canada then had a much larger population than Upper Canada. When the
+ tide of overseas immigration put Canada West well in the lead, it in its
+ turn was denied the full representation its greater population warranted.
+ First the Conservatives, and later the Clear Grits, took up the cry of
+ "Representation by Population." It was not difficult to convince the
+ average Canada West elector that it was an outrage that three
+ French-Canadian voters should count as much as four English-speaking
+ voters. Macdonald, relying for power on his alliance with Cartier, could
+ not accept the demand, and saw seat after seat in Canada West fall to
+ Brown and his "Rep. by Pop." crusaders. Brown's success only solidified
+ Canada East against him, until, in the early sixties, party lines
+ coincided almost with sectional lines. Parties were so closely matched
+ that the life of a Ministry was short. In the three years ending in 1864
+ there were two general elections and four Ministries. Political
+ controversy became bitterly personal, and corruption was spreading fast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constant efforts were made to avert the threatened deadlock. Macdonald,
+ who always trusted more to personal management than to constitutional
+ expedients, won over one after another of the opponents who troubled him,
+ and thus postponed the day of reckoning. Rival plans of constitutional
+ reform were brought forward. The simplest remedy was the repeal of the
+ union, leaving each province to go its own way. But this solution was felt
+ to be a backward step and one which would create more problems than it
+ would solve. More support was given the double majority principle, a
+ provision that no measure affecting one section should be passed unless a
+ majority from that section favored it, but this method broke down when put
+ to a practical test. The Rouges, and later Brown, put forward a plan for
+ the abolition of legislative union in favor of a federal union of the two
+ Canadas. This lacked the wide vision of the fourth suggestion, which was
+ destined to be adopted as the solution, namely, the federation of all
+ British North America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Federal union, it was urged, would solve party and sectional deadlock by
+ removing to local legislatures the questions which created the greatest
+ divergence of opinion. The federal union of the Canadas alone or the
+ federal union of all British North America would either achieve this end.
+ But there were other ends in view which only the wider plan could serve.
+ The needs of defense demanded a single control for all the colonies. The
+ probable loss of the open market of the United States made it imperative
+ to unite all the provinces in a single free trade area. The first faint
+ stirrings of national ambition, prompting the younger men to throw off the
+ leading strings of colonial dependence, were stimulated by the vision of a
+ country which would stretch from sea to sea. The westward growth of the
+ United States and the reports of travelers were opening men's eyes to the
+ possibilities of the vast lands under the control of the Hudson's Bay
+ Company and the need of asserting authority over these northern regions if
+ they were to be held for the Crown. Eastward, also, men were awaking to
+ their isolation. There was not, in the Maritime Provinces, any popular
+ desire for union with the Canadas or any political crisis compelling
+ drastic remedy, but the need of union for defense was felt in some
+ quarters, and ambitious politicians who had mastered their local fields
+ were beginning to sigh for larger worlds to conquer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took the patient and courageous striving of many men to make this
+ vision of a united country a reality. The roll of the Fathers of
+ Confederation is a long and honored one. Yet on that roll there are some
+ outstanding names, the names of men whose services were not merely devoted
+ but indispensable. The first to bring the question within the field of
+ practical politics was A. T. Galt, but when attempt after attempt in 1864
+ to organize a Ministry with a safe working majority had failed, it was
+ George Brown who proposed that the party leaders should join hands in
+ devising some form of federation. Macdonald had hitherto been a stout
+ opponent of all change but, once converted, he threw himself into the
+ struggle, with energy. He never appeared to better advantage than in the
+ negotiations of the next few years, steering the ship of Confederation
+ through the perilous shoals of personal and sectional jealousies. Few had
+ a harder or a more important task than Cartier's-reconciling Canada East
+ to a project under which it would be swamped, in the proposed federal
+ House, by the representatives of four or five English-speaking provinces.
+ McDougall, a Canada West Reformer, shared with Brown the credit for
+ awakening Canadians to the value of the Far West and to the need of
+ including it in their plans of expansion. D'Arcy McGee, more than any
+ other, fired the imagination of the people with glowing pictures of the
+ greatness and the limitless possibilities of the new nation. Charles
+ Tupper, the head of a Nova Scotia Conservative Ministry which had
+ overthrown the old tribune, Joseph Howe, had the hardest and seemingly
+ most hopeless task of all; for his province appeared to be content with
+ its separate existence and was inflamed against union by Howe's eloquent
+ opposition; but to Tupper a hard fight was as the breath of his nostrils.
+ In New Brunswick, Leonard Tilley, a man of less vigor but equal
+ determination, led the struggle until Confederation was achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in June, 1864, that the leaders of the Parliament of Canada became
+ convinced that federation was the only way out. A coalition Cabinet was
+ formed, with Sir Etienne Tache as nominal Premier, and with Macdonald,
+ Brown, Cartier, and Galt all included. An opening for discussing the wider
+ federation was offered by a meeting which was to be held in Charlottetown,
+ Prince Edward Island, of delegates from the three Maritime Provinces to
+ consider the formation of a local union. There, in September, 1864, went
+ eight of the Canadian Ministers. Their proposals met with favor. A series
+ of banquets brought the plans before the public, seemingly with good
+ results. The conference was resumed a month later at Quebec. Here, in
+ sixteen working days, delegates from Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
+ Prince Edward Island, and also from Newfoundland, thirty-three in all,
+ after frank and full deliberation behind closed doors, agreed upon the
+ terms of union. Macdonald's insistence upon a legislative union, wiping
+ out all provincial boundaries, was overridden; but the lesson of the
+ conflict between the federal and state jurisdiction in the United States
+ was seen in provisions to strengthen the central authority. The general
+ government was empowered to appoint the lieutenant governors of the
+ various provinces and to veto any provincial law; to it were assigned all
+ legislative powers not specifically granted to the provinces; and a
+ subsidy granted by the general government in lieu of the customs revenues
+ resigned by the provinces still further increased their dependence upon
+ the central authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had taken less than three weeks to draw up the plan of union. It took
+ nearly three years to secure its adoption. So far as Canada was concerned,
+ little trouble was encountered. British traditions of parliamentary
+ supremacy prevented any direct submission of the question to the people;
+ but their support was clearly manifested in the press and on the platform,
+ and the legislature ratified the project with emphatic majorities from
+ both sections of the province. Though it did not pass without opposition,
+ particularly from the Rouges under Dorion and from steadfast supporters of
+ old ways like Christopher Dunkin and Sandfield Macdonald, the fight was
+ only halfhearted. Not so, however, in the provinces by the sea. The
+ delegates who returned from the Quebec Conference were astounded to meet a
+ storm of criticism. Local pride and local prejudice were aroused. The
+ thrifty maritime population feared Canadian extravagance and Canadian high
+ tariffs. They were content to remain as they were and fearful of the
+ unknown. Here and there advocates of annexation to the United States
+ swelled the chorus. Merchants in Halifax and St. John feared that trade
+ would be drawn away to Montreal. Above all, Howe, whether because of
+ personal pique or of intense local patriotism, had put himself at the head
+ of the agitation against union, and his eloquence could still play upon
+ the prejudices of the people. The Tilley Government in New Brunswick was
+ swept out of power early in 1865. Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland
+ both drew back, the one for eight years, the other to remain outside the
+ fold to the present day. In Nova Scotia a similar fate was averted only by
+ Tupper's Fabian tactics. Then the tide turned. In New Brunswick the Fenian
+ Raids, pressure from the Colonial Office, and the blunders of the
+ anti-Confederate Government brought Tilley back to power on a
+ Confederation platform a year later. Tupper seized the occasion and
+ carried his motion through the Nova Scotia House. Without seeking further
+ warrant the delegates from Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick met in
+ London late in 1866, and there in consultation with the Colonial Office
+ drew up the final resolutions. They were embodied in the British North
+ America Act which went through the Imperial Parliament not only without
+ raising questions but even without exciting interest. On July 1, 1867, the
+ Dominion of Canada, as the new federation was to be known, came into
+ being. It is a curious coincidence that the same date witnessed the
+ establishment of the North German Bund, which in less than three years was
+ to expand into the German Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. THE DAYS OF TRIAL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The federation of the four provinces was an excellent achievement, but it
+ was only a beginning on the long, hard road to nationhood. The Fathers of
+ Confederation had set their goal and had proclaimed their faith. It
+ remained for the next generation to seek to make their vision a reality.
+ It was still necessary to make the Dominion actual by bringing in all the
+ lands from sea to sea. And when, on paper, Canada covered half a
+ continent, union had yet to be given body and substance by railway
+ building and continuous settlement. The task of welding two races and many
+ scattered provinces into a single people would call for all the
+ statesmanship and prudence the country had to give. To chart the relations
+ between the federal and the provincial authorities, which had so nearly
+ brought to shipwreck the federal experiment of Canada's great neighbor,
+ was like navigating an unknown sea. And what was to be the attitude of the
+ new Dominion, half nation, half colony, to the mother country and to the
+ republic to the south, no one could yet foretell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first problem which faced the Dominion was the organization of the new
+ machinery of government. It was necessary to choose a federal
+ Administration to guide the Parliament which was soon to meet at Ottawa,
+ the capital of the old Canada since 1858 and now accepted as the capital
+ of the larger Canada. It was necessary also to establish provincial
+ Governments in Canada West, henceforth known as Ontario and in Canada
+ East, or Quebec. The provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia were to
+ retain their existing provincial Governments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no doubt as to whom the Governor General, Lord Monck, should
+ call to form the first federal Administration. Macdonald had proved
+ himself easily the greatest leader of men the four provinces had produced.
+ The entrance of two new provinces into the union, with all the
+ possibilities of new party groupings and new personal alliances it
+ involved, created a situation in which he had no rival. His great
+ antagonist, Brown, passed off the parliamentary stage. When he proposed a
+ coalition to carry through federation, Brown had recognized that he was
+ sacrificing his chief political asset, the discontent of Canada West. But
+ he was too true a patriot to hesitate a moment on that score, and in any
+ case he was sufficiently confident of his own abilities to believe that he
+ could hold his own in a fresh field. In this expectation he was deceived.
+ No man among his contemporaries surpassed him in sheer ability, in
+ fearless honesty, in vigor of debate, but he lacked Macdonald's genial and
+ supple art of managing men. And with broad questions of state policy for
+ the moment out of the way, it was capacity in managing men that was to
+ count in determining success. Never afterward did Brown take an active
+ part in parliamentary life, though still a power in the land through his
+ newspaper, the Toronto "Globe", which was regarded as the Scotch
+ Presbyterian's second Bible. Of the other leaders of old Canada, Cartier
+ with failing health was losing his vigor and losing also the prestige with
+ his party which his solid Canada East majority had given him; Galt soon
+ retired to private business, with occasional incursions into diplomacy;
+ and McGee fell a victim in 1868 to a Fenian assassin. From the Maritime
+ Provinces the ablest recruit was Tupper, the most dogged fighter in
+ Canadian parliamentary annals and a lifelong sworn ally of Macdonald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at first uncertain what the grouping of parties would be. Macdonald
+ naturally wished to retain the coalition which assured him unquestioned
+ mastery, and the popular desire to give Confederation a good start also
+ favored such a course. In his first Cabinet, formed with infinite
+ difficulty, with provinces, parties, religions, races, all to consider in
+ filling a limited number of posts, Macdonald included six Liberal
+ ministers out of thirteen, three from Ontario, and three from the Maritime
+ Provinces. Yet if an Opposition had not existed, it would have been
+ necessary to create one in order to work the parliamentary machine. The
+ attempt to keep the coalition together did not long succeed. On the eve of
+ the first federal election the Ontario Reformers in convention decided to
+ oppose the Government, even though it contained three of their former
+ leaders. In the contest, held in August and September, 1867, Macdonald
+ triumphed in every province except Nova Scotia but faced a growing
+ Opposition party. Under the virtual leadership of Alexander Mackenzie,
+ fragments of parties from the four provinces were united into a single
+ Liberal group. In a few years the majority of the Liberal rank and file
+ were back in the fold, and the Liberal members in the Cabinet had become
+ frankly Conservative. Coalition had faded away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within six years after Confederation the whole northern half of the
+ continent had been absorbed by Canada. The four original provinces
+ comprised only one-tenth of the area of the present Dominion, some 377,000
+ square miles as against 3,730,000 today. The most easterly of the
+ provinces, little Prince Edward Island, had drawn back in 1865, content in
+ isolation. Eight years later this province entered the fold. Hard times
+ and a glimpse of the financial strength of the new federation had wrought
+ a change of heart. The solution of the century-old problem of the island,
+ absentee landlordism, threatened to strain the finances of the province;
+ and men began to look to Ottawa for relief. A railway crisis turned their
+ thoughts in the same direction. The provincial authorities had recently
+ arranged for the building of a narrow-gauge road from one end of the
+ island to the other. It was agreed that the contractors should be paid
+ 5000 pounds a mile in provincial debentures, but without any stipulation
+ as to the total length, so that the builders caused the railway to meander
+ and zigzag freely in search of lower grades or long paying stretches. In
+ 1873, which was everywhere a year of black depression, it was found that
+ these debentures, which were pledged by the contractors to a local bank
+ for advances, could not be sold except at a heavy loss. The directors of
+ the bank were influential in the Government of the province. It was not
+ surprising, therefore, that the government soon opened negotiations with
+ Ottawa. The Dominion authorities offered generous terms, financing the
+ land purchase scheme, and taking over the railway. Some of the islanders
+ made bitter charges, but the Legislature confirmed the agreement, and on
+ July 1, 1873, Prince Edward Island entered Confederation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Prince Edward Island was deciding to come in, Nova Scotia was
+ straining every nerve to get out. There was no question that Nova Scotia
+ had been brought into the union against its will. The provincial
+ Legislature in 1866, it is true, backed Tupper. But the people backed
+ Howe, who thereupon went to London to protest against the inclusion of
+ Nova Scotia without consulting the electors, but he was not heeded. The
+ passing of the Act only redoubled the agitation. In the provincial
+ election of 1867, the anti-Confederates carried thirty-six out of
+ thirty-eight seats. In the federal election Tupper was the only union
+ candidate returned in nineteen seats contested. A second delegation was
+ sent to London to demand repeal. Tupper crossed the ocean to counter this
+ effort and was successful. Then he sought out Howe, urged that further
+ agitation was useless and could only bring anarchy or, what both counted
+ worse, a movement for annexation to the United States, and pressed him to
+ use his influence to allay the storm. Howe gave way; unfortunately for his
+ own fame, he went further and accepted a seat in the federal Cabinet. Many
+ of his old followers kept up the fight, but others decided to make a
+ bargain with necessity. Macdonald agreed to give the province "better
+ terms," and the Dominion assumed a larger part of its debt. The bitterness
+ aroused by Tupper's high-handed procedure lingered for many a day; but
+ before the first Parliament was over, repeal had ceased to be a practical
+ issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Union could never be real so long as leagues of barren, unbroken
+ wilderness separated the maritime from the central provinces. Free
+ intercourse, ties of trade, knowledge which would sweep away prejudice,
+ could not come until a railway had spanned this wilderness. In the fifties
+ plans had been made for a main trunk line to run from Halifax to the
+ Detroit River. This ambitious scheme proved too great for the resources of
+ the separate provinces, but sections of the road were built in each
+ province. As a condition of Confederation, the Dominion Government
+ undertook to fill in the long gaps. Surveys were begun immediately; and by
+ 1876, under the direction of Sandford Fleming, an engineer of eminence,
+ the Intercolonial Railway was completed. It never succeeded in making ends
+ meet financially, but it did make ends meet politically. In great measure
+ it achieved the purpose of national solidification for which it was mainly
+ designed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the bounds of the Dominion were being pushed westward to the
+ Pacific. The old province of Canada, as the heir of New France, had vague
+ claims to the western plains, but the Hudson's Bay Company was in
+ possession. The Dominion decided to buy out its rights and agreed, in
+ 1869, to pay the Company 300,000 pounds for the transfer of its lands and
+ exclusive privileges, the Company to retain its trading posts and two
+ sections in every township. So far all went well. But the Canadian
+ Government, new to the tasks of empire and not as efficient in
+ administration as it should have been, overlooked the necessity of
+ consulting the wishes and the prejudices of the men on the spot. It was
+ not merely land and buffalo herds which were being transferred but also
+ sovereignty over a people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the valley of the Red River there were some twelve thousand metis, or
+ half-breeds, descendants of Indian mothers and French or Scottish fathers.
+ The Dominion authorities intended to give them a large share in their own
+ government but neglected to arrange for a formal conference. The metis
+ were left to gather their impression of the character and intentions of
+ the new rulers from indiscreet and sometimes overbearing surveyors and
+ land seekers. In 1869, under the leadership of Louis Riel, the one man of
+ education in the settlement, able but vain and unbalanced, and with the
+ Hudson's Bay officials looking on unconcerned, the metis decided to oppose
+ being made "the colony of a colony." The Governor sent out from Ottawa was
+ refused entrance, and a provisional Government under Riel assumed control.
+ The Ottawa authorities first tried persuasion and sent a commission of
+ three, Donald A. Smith (afterwards Lord Strathcona), Colonel de Salaberry,
+ and Vicar General Thibault. Smith was gradually restoring unity and order,
+ when the act of Riel in shooting Thomas Scott, an Ontario settler and a
+ member of the powerful Orange order, set passions flaring. Mgr. Tache, the
+ Catholic bishop of the diocese, on his return aided in quieting the metis.
+ Delegates were sent by the Provisional Government to Ottawa, and, though
+ not officially recognized, they influenced the terms of settlement. An
+ expedition under Colonel Wolseley marched through the wilderness north of
+ Lake Superior only to find that Riel and his lieutenants had fled. By the
+ Manitoba Act the Red River country was admitted to Confederation as a
+ self-governing province, under the name of Manitoba, while the country
+ west to the Rockies was given territorial status. The Indian tribes were
+ handled with tact and justice, but though for the time the danger of armed
+ resistance had passed, the embers of discontent were not wholly quenched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extension of Canadian sovereignty beyond the Rockies came about in
+ quieter fashion. After Mackenzie had shown the way, Simon Fraser and David
+ Thompson and other agents of the NorthWest Company took up the work of
+ exploration and fur trading. With the union of the two rival companies in
+ 1821, the Hudson's Bay Company became the sole authority on the Pacific
+ coast. Settlers straggled in slowly until, in the late fifties, the
+ discovery of rich placer gold on the Fraser and later in the Cariboo
+ brought tens of thousands of miners from Australia and California, only to
+ drift away again almost as quickly when the sands began to fail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Local governments had been established both in Vancouver Island and on the
+ mainland. They were joined in a single province in 1866. One of the first
+ acts of the new Legislature was to seek consolidation with the Dominion.
+ Inspired by an enthusiastic Englishman, Alfred Waddington, who had dreamed
+ for years of a transcontinental railway, the province stipulated that
+ within ten years Canada should complete a road from the Pacific to a
+ junction with the railways of the East. These terms were considered
+ presumptuous on the part of a little settlement of ten or fifteen thousand
+ whites; but Macdonald had faith in the resources of Canada and in what the
+ morrow would bring forth. The bargain was made; and British Columbia
+ entered the Confederation on July 1, 1871.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ East and West were now staked out. Only the Far North remained outside the
+ bounds of the Dominion and this was soon acquired. In 1879 the British
+ Government transferred to Canada all its rights and claims over the
+ islands in the Arctic Archipelago and all other British territory in North
+ America save Newfoundland and its strip of Labrador. From the Atlantic to
+ the Pacific, and from the forty-ninth parallel to the North Pole, now all
+ was Canadian soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confederation brought new powers and new responsibilities and thrust
+ Canada into the field of foreign affairs. It was with slow and groping
+ steps that the Dominion advanced along this new path. Then&mdash;as now&mdash;for
+ Canada foreign relations meant first and foremost relations with her great
+ neighbor to the south. The likelihood of war had passed. The need for
+ closer trade relations remained. When the Reciprocity Treaty was brought
+ to an end, on March 17, 1866, Canada at first refrained from raising her
+ tariff walls. "The provinces," as George Brown declared in 1874, "assumed
+ that there were matters existing in 1865-66 to trouble the spirit of
+ American statesmen for the moment, and they waited patiently for the sober
+ second thought which was very long in coming, but in the meantime Canada
+ played a good neighbor's part, and incidentally served her own ends, by
+ continuing to grant the United States most of the privileges which had
+ been given under the treaty free navigation and free goods, and, subject
+ to a license fee, access to the fisheries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was over these fisheries that friction first developed.* Canadian
+ statesmen were determined to prevent poaching on the inshore fisheries,
+ both because poaching was poaching and because they considered the fishery
+ privileges the best makeweight in trade negotiations with the United
+ States. At first American vessels were admitted on payment of a license
+ fee; but when, on the increase of the fee, many vessels tried to fish
+ inshore without permission, the license system was abolished, and in 1870
+ a fleet of revenue cruisers began to police the coast waters. American
+ fishermen chafed at exclusion from waters they had come to consider almost
+ their own, and there were many cases of seizure and of angry charge and
+ countercharge. President Grant, in his message to Congress in 1870,
+ denounced the policy of the Canadian authorities as arbitrary and
+ provocative. Other issues between the two countries were outstanding as
+ well. Canada had a claim against the United States for not preventing the
+ Fenian Raids of 1866; and the United States had a much bigger bill against
+ Great Britain for neglect in permitting the escape of the Alabama. Some
+ settlement of these disputed matters was necessary; and it was largely
+ through the activities of a Canadian banker and politician, Sir John Rose,
+ that an agreement was reached to submit all the issues to a joint
+ commission.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Path of Empire".
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Macdonald was offered and accepted with misgivings a post as one of the
+ five British Commissioners. He pressed the traditional Canadian policy of
+ offering fishery for trade privileges but found no backing in this or
+ other matters from his British colleagues, and he met only unyielding
+ opposition from the American Commissioners. He fell back, under protest,
+ on a settlement of narrower scope, which permitted reciprocity in
+ navigation and bonding privileges, free admission of Canadian and
+ Newfoundland fish to United States markets and of American fishermen to
+ Canadian and Newfoundland waters, and which provided for a subsidiary
+ commission to fix the amount to be paid by the United States for the
+ surplus advantage thus received. The Fenian Raids claims were not even
+ considered, and Macdonald was angered by this indifference on the part of
+ his British colleagues. "They seem to have only one thing in their minds,"
+ he reported privately to Ottawa, "that is, to go home to England with a
+ treaty in their pocket, settling everything, no matter at what cost to
+ Canada." Yet when the time came for the Canadian Parliament to decide
+ whether to ratify the fishery clauses of the Treaty of Washington in which
+ the conclusions of the commission were embodied, Macdonald, in spite of
+ the unpopularity of the bargain in Canada, "urged Parliament to accept the
+ treaty, accept it with all its imperfections, to accept it for the sake of
+ peace and for the sake of the great Empire of which we form a part." The
+ treaty was ratified in 1871 by all the powers concerned; and the stimulus
+ to the peaceful settlement of international disputes given by the Geneva
+ Tribunal which followed* justified the subordination of Canada's specific
+ interests.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Path of Empire"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A change in party now followed in Canada, but the new Government under
+ Alexander Mackenzie was as fully committed as the Government of Sir John
+ Macdonald to the policy of bartering fishery for trade advantage. Canada
+ therefore proposed that instead of carrying out the provisions for a money
+ settlement, the whole question should be reopened. The Administration at
+ Washington was sympathetic. George Brown was appointed along with the
+ British Ambassador, Sir Edward Thornton, to open negotiations. Under
+ Brown's energetic leadership a settlement of all outstanding issues was
+ drafted in 1874, which permitted freedom of trade in natural and in most
+ manufactured products for twenty-one years, and settled fishery, coasting
+ trade, navigation, and minor boundary issues. But diplomats proposed, and
+ the United States Senate disposed. Protectionist feeling was strong at
+ Washington, and the currency problem absorbing, and hence this broad and
+ statesmanlike essay in neighborliness could not secure an hour's
+ attention. This plan having failed, the Canadian Government fell back on
+ the letter of the treaty. A Commission which consisted of the Honorable E.
+ H. Kellogg representing the United States, Sir Alexander T. Galt
+ representing Canada, and the Belgian Minister to Washington, M. Delfosse,
+ as chairman, awarded Canada and Newfoundland $5,500,000 as the excess
+ value of the fisheries for the ten years the arrangement was to run. The
+ award was denounced in the United States as absurdly excessive; but a
+ sense of honor and the knowledge that millions of dollars from the Alabama
+ award were still in the Treasury moved the Senate finally to acquiesce,
+ though only for the ten-year term fixed by treaty. In Canada the award was
+ received with delight as a signal proof that when left to themselves
+ Canadians could hold their own. The prevailing view was well summed up in
+ a letter from Mackenzie to the Canadian representative on the Halifax
+ commission, written shortly before the decision: "I am glad you still have
+ hopes of a fair verdict. I am doubly anxious to have it, first, because we
+ are entitled to it and need the dollars, and, second, because it will be
+ the first Canadian diplomatic triumph, and will justify me in insisting
+ that we know our neighbors and our own business better than any
+ Englishmen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackenzie's insistence that Canada must take a larger share in the control
+ of her foreign affairs was too advanced a stand for many of his more
+ conservative countrymen. For others, he did not go far enough. The early
+ seventies saw the rise of a short-lived movement in favor of Canadian
+ independence. To many independence from England seemed the logical sequel
+ to Confederation; and the rapid expansion of Canadian territory over half
+ a continent stimulated national pride and national self-consciousness
+ Opinion in England regarding Canadian independence was still more
+ outspoken. There imperialism was at its lowest ebb. With scarcely an
+ exception, English politicians, from Bright to Disraeli, were hostile or
+ indifferent to connection with the colonies, which had now ceased to be a
+ trade asset and had clearly become a military liability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no concrete problem arose to make the matter a political issue. In
+ England a growing uneasiness over the protectionist policies and the
+ colonial ambitions of her European rivals were soon to revive imperial
+ sentiment. In Canada the ties of affection for the old land, as well as
+ the inertia fostered by long years of colonial dependence, kept the
+ independence movement from spreading far. For the time the rising national
+ spirit found expression in economic rather than political channels. The
+ protectionist movement which a few years later swept all Canada before it
+ owed much of its strength to its claim to be the national policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not imperial or foreign relations that dominated public
+ interest in the seventies. Domestic politics were intensely absorbing and
+ bitterly contested. Within five years there came about two sudden and
+ sweeping reversals of power. Parties and Cabinets which had seemed firmly
+ entrenched were dramatically overthrown by sudden changes in the personal
+ factors and in the issues of the day. In the summer of 1872 the second
+ general election for the Dominion was held. The Opposition had now gained
+ in strength. The Government had ceased to be in any real sense a
+ coalition, and most of the old Liberal rank and file were back in the
+ party camp. They had found a vigorous leader in Alexander Mackenzie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackenzie had come to Canada from Scotland in 1842 as a lad of twenty. He
+ worked at his trade as a stonemason, educated himself by wide reading and
+ constant debating, became a successful contractor and, after
+ Confederation, had proved himself one of the most aggressive and
+ uncompromising champions of Upper Canada Liberalism. In the first Dominion
+ Parliament he tacitly came to be regarded as the leader of all the groups
+ opposed to the Macdonald Administration. He was at the same time active in
+ the Ontario Legislature since, for the first five years of Confederation,
+ no law forbade membership in both federal and provincial Parliaments, and
+ the short sessions of that blessed time made such double service feasible.
+ Here he was aided by two other men of outstanding ability, Edward Blake
+ and Oliver Mowat. Blake, the son of a well-to-do Irishman who had been
+ active in the fight for responsible government, became Premier of Ontario
+ in 1871 but retired in 1872 when a law abolishing dual representation made
+ it necessary for him to choose between Toronto and Ottawa. His place was
+ taken by Mowat, who for a quarter of a century gave the province thrifty,
+ honest, and conservatively progressive government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the growing forces opposed to him Macdonald triumphed once
+ more in the election of 1872. Ontario fell away, but Quebec and the
+ Maritime Provinces stood true. A Conservative majority of thirty or forty
+ seemed to assure Macdonald another five-year lease of power. Yet within a
+ year the Pacific Scandal had driven him from office and overwhelmed him in
+ disgrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pacific Scandal occurred in connection with the financing of the
+ railway which the Dominion Government had promised British Columbia, when
+ that province entered Confederation in 1871, would be built through to the
+ Pacific coast within ten years. The bargain was good politics but poor
+ business. It was a rash undertaking for a people of three and a half
+ millions, with a national revenue of less than twenty million dollars, to
+ pledge itself to build a railway through the rocky wilderness north of
+ Lake Superior, through the trackless plains and prairies of the middle
+ west, and across the mountain ranges that barred the coast. Yet Macdonald
+ had sufficient faith in the country, in himself, and in the happy
+ accidents of time&mdash;a confidence that won him the nickname of "Old
+ Tomorrow"&mdash;to give the pledge. Then came the question of ways and
+ means. At first the Government planned to build the road. On second
+ thoughts, however, it decided to follow the example set by the United
+ States in the construction of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific, and
+ to entrust the work to a private company liberally subsidized with land
+ and cash. Two companies were organized with a view to securing the
+ contract, one a Montreal company under Sir Hugh Allan, the foremost
+ Canadian man of business and the head of the Allan steamship fleet, and
+ the other a Toronto company under D. L. Macpherson, who had been concerned
+ in the building of the Grand Trunk. Their rivalry was intense. After the
+ election of 1872 a strong compromise company was formed, with Allan at the
+ head, and to this company the contract was awarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Parliament met in 1872, a Liberal member, L. S. Huntington, made the
+ charge that Allan had really been acting on behalf of certain American
+ capitalists and that he had made lavish contributions to the Government
+ campaign fund in the recent election. In the course of the summer these
+ charges were fully substantiated. Allan was proved by his own
+ correspondence, stolen from his solicitor's office, to have spent over
+ $350,000, largely advanced by his American allies, in buying the favor of
+ newspapers and politicians. Nearly half of this amount had been
+ contributed to the Conservative campaign fund, with the knowledge and at
+ the instance of Cartier and Macdonald. Macdonald, while unable to disprove
+ the charges, urged that there was no connection between the contributions
+ and the granting of the charter. But his defense was not heeded. A wave of
+ indignation swept the country; his own supporters in Parliament fell away;
+ and in November, 1873, he resigned. Mackenzie, who was summoned to form a
+ new Ministry, dissolved Parliament and was sustained by a majority of two
+ to one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackenzie gave the country honest and efficient administration. Among his
+ most important achievements were the reform of elections by the
+ introduction of the secret ballot and the requirement that elections
+ should be held on a single day instead of being spread over weeks, a
+ measure of local option in controlling the liquor traffic, and the
+ establishment of a Canadian Supreme Court and the Royal Military College&mdash;the
+ Canadian West Point. But fate and his own limitations were against him. He
+ was too absorbed in the details of administration to have time for the
+ work of a party leader. In his policy of constructing the Canadian Pacific
+ as a government road, after Allan had resigned his charter, he manifested
+ a caution and a slowness that brought British Columbia to the verge of
+ secession. But it was chiefly the world-wide depression that began in his
+ first year of office, 1873, which proved his undoing. Trade was stagnant,
+ bankruptcies multiplied, and acute suffering occurred among the poor in
+ the larger cities. Mackenzie had no solution to offer except patience and
+ economy; and the Opposition were freer to frame an enticing policy. The
+ country was turning toward a high tariff as the solution of its ills.
+ Protection had not hitherto been a party issue in Canada, and it was still
+ uncertain which party would take it up. Finally Mackenzie, who was an
+ ardent free trader, and the Nova Scotia wing of his party triumphed over
+ the protectionists in their own ranks and made a low tariff the party
+ platform. Macdonald, who had been prepared to take up free trade if
+ Mackenzie adopted protection, now boldly urged the high tariff panacea.
+ The promise of work and wages for all, the appeal to national spirit made
+ by the arguments of self-sufficiency and fully rounded development, the
+ desire to retaliate against the United States, which was still deaf to any
+ plea for more liberal trade relations, swept the country. The Conservative
+ minority of over sixty was converted into a still greater majority in the
+ general election of 1878, and the leader whom all men five years before
+ had considered doomed, returned to power, never to lose it while life
+ lasted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first task of the new Government, in which Tupper was Macdonald's
+ chief supporter, was to carry out its high tariff pledges. "Tell us how
+ much protection you want, gentlemen," said Macdonald to a group of Ontario
+ manufacturers, "and we'll give you what you need." In the new tariff needs
+ were rated almost as high as wants. Particularly on textiles, sugar, and
+ iron and steel products, duties were raised far beyond the old levels and
+ stimulated investment just as the world-wide depression which had lasted
+ since 1873 passed away. Canada shared in the recovery and gave the credit
+ to the well-advertised political patent medicine taken just before the
+ turn for the better came. For years the National Policy or "N.P.," as its
+ supporters termed it, had all the vogue of a popular tonic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next task of the Government was to carry through in earnest the
+ building of the railway to the Pacific. For over a year Macdonald
+ persisted in Mackenzie's policy of government construction but with the
+ same slow and unsatisfactory results. Then an opportunity came to enlist
+ the services of a private syndicate. Four Canadians, Donald A. Smith, a
+ former Hudson's Bay Company factor, George Stephen, a leading merchant and
+ banker of Montreal, James J. Hill and Norman W. Kittson, owners of a small
+ line of boats on the Red River, had joined forces to revive a bankrupt
+ Minnesota railway.* They had succeeded beyond all parallel, and the
+ reconstructed road, which later developed into the Great Northern, made
+ them all rich overnight. This success whetted their appetite for further
+ western railway building and further millions of rich western acres in
+ subsidies. They met Macdonald and Tupper half way. By the bargain
+ completed in 1881 the Canadian Pacific Railway Company undertook to build
+ and operate the road from the Ottawa Valley to the Pacific coast, in
+ return for the gift of the completed portions of the road (on which the
+ Government spent over $37,000,000), a subsidy of $25,000,000 in cash,
+ 25,000,000 selected acres of prairie land, exemption from taxes, exemption
+ from regulation of rates until ten per cent was earned, and a promise on
+ the part of the Dominion to charter no western lines connecting with the
+ United States for twenty years. The terms were lavish and were fiercely
+ denounced by the Opposition, now under the leadership of Edward Blake. But
+ the people were too eager for railway expansion to criticize the terms.
+ The Government was returned to power in 1882 and the contract held.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Railroad Builders", by John Moody (in "The
+ Chronicles of America").
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The new company was rich in potential resources but weak in available
+ cash. Neither in New York nor in London could purse strings be loosened
+ for the purpose of building a road through what the world considered a
+ barren and Arctic wilderness. But in the faith and vision of the
+ president, George Stephen, and the ruthless energy of the general manager,
+ William Van Horne, American born and trained, the Canadian Pacific had
+ priceless assets. Aided in critical times by further government loans,
+ they carried the project through, and by 1886, five years before the time
+ fixed by their contract, trains were running from Montreal to Port Moody,
+ opposite Vancouver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden burst of prosperity followed the building of the road. Settlers
+ poured into the West by tens of thousands, eastern investors promoted
+ colonization companies, land values soared, and speculation gave a fillip
+ to every line of trade. The middle eighties were years of achievement, of
+ prosperity, and of confident hope. Then prosperity fled as quickly as it
+ had come. The West failed to hold its settlers. Farm and factory found
+ neither markets nor profits. The country was bled white by emigration.
+ Parliamentary contest and racial feud threatened the hard-won unity.
+ Canada was passing through its darkest hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this period, political friction was incessant. Canada was striving
+ to solve in the eighties the difficult question which besets all
+ federations&mdash;the limits between federal and provincial power. Ontario
+ was the chief champion of provincial rights. The struggle was intensified
+ by the fact that a Liberal Government reigned at Toronto and a
+ Conservative Government at Ottawa, as well as by the keen personal rivalry
+ between Mowat and Macdonald. In nearly every constitutional duel Mowat
+ triumphed. The accepted range of the legislative power of the provinces
+ was widened by the decisions of the courts, particularly of the highest
+ court of appeal, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in England.
+ The successful resistance of Ontario and Manitoba to Macdonald's attempt
+ to disallow provincial laws proved this power, though conferred by the
+ Constitution, to be an unwieldy weapon. By the middle nineties the veto
+ had been virtually abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More serious than these political differences was the racial feud that
+ followed the second Riel Rebellion. For a second time the Canadian
+ Government failed to show the foresight and the sympathy required in
+ dealing with an isolated and backward people. The valley of the
+ Saskatchewan, far northwest of the Red River, was the scene of the new
+ difficulty. Here thousands of metis, or French half-breeds, had settled.
+ The passing of the buffalo, which had been their chief subsistence, and
+ the arrival of settlers from the East caused them intense alarm. They
+ pressed the Government for certain grants of land and for the retention of
+ the old French custom of surveying the land along the river front in deep
+ narrow strips, rather than according to the chessboard pattern taken over
+ by Canada from the United States. Red tape, indifference, procrastination,
+ rather than any illwill, delayed the redress of the grievances of the
+ half-breeds. In despair they called Louis Riel back from his exile in
+ Montana. With his arrival the agitation acquired a new and dangerous
+ force. Claiming to be the prophet of a new religion, he put himself at the
+ head of his people and, in the spring of 1885, raised the flag of revolt.
+ His military adviser, Gabriel Dumont, an old buffalo hunter, was a
+ natural-born general, and the half-breeds were good shots and brave
+ fighters. An expedition of Canadian volunteers was rushed west, and the
+ rebellion was put down quickly, but not without some hard fighting and
+ gallant strokes and counterstrokes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The racial passions roused by this conflict, however, did not pass so
+ quickly. The fate to be meted out to Riel was the burning question.
+ Ontario saw in him the murderer of Scott and an ambitious plotter who had
+ twice stirred up armed rebellion. Quebec saw in him a man of French blood,
+ persecuted because he had stood up manfully for the undoubted rights of
+ his kinsmen. Today experts agree that Riel was insane and should have been
+ spared the gallows on this if on no other account. But at the moment the
+ plea of insanity was rejected. The Government made up for its laxity
+ before the rebellion by severity after it; and in November, 1885, Riel was
+ sent to the scaffold. Bitterness rankled in many a French-Canadian heart
+ for long years after; and in Ontario, where the Orange order was strongly
+ entrenched, a faction threatened "to smash Confederation into its original
+ fragments" rather than submit to "French domination."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Racial and religious passions, once aroused, soon found new fuel to feed
+ upon. Honore Mercier, a brilliant but unscrupulous leader who had ridden
+ to power in the province of Quebec on the Riel issue, roused Protestant
+ ire by restoring estates which had been confiscated at the conquest in
+ 1763 to the Jesuits and other Roman Catholic authorities, in proportions
+ which the act provided were to be determined by "Our Holy Father the
+ Pope." In Ontario restrictions began to be imposed on the freedom of
+ French-Canadian communities on the border to make French the sole or
+ dominant tongue in the schoolroom. A little later the controversy was
+ echoed in Manitoba in the repeal by a determined Protestant majority of
+ the denominational school privileges hitherto enjoyed by the Roman
+ Catholic minority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Economic discontent was widespread. It was a time of low and falling
+ prices. Farmers found the American market barred, the British market
+ flooded, the home market stagnant. The factories stimulated by the "N. P."
+ lacked the growing market they had hoped for. In the West climatic
+ conditions not yet understood, the monopoly of the Canadian Pacific, and
+ the competition of the States to the south, which still had millions of
+ acres of free land, brought settlement to a standstill. From all parts of
+ Canada the "exodus" to the United States continued until by 1890 there
+ were in that country more than one-third as many people of Canadian birth
+ or descent as in Canada itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not surprising that in these extremities men were prepared to make
+ trial of drastic remedies. Nor was it surprising that it was beyond the
+ borders of Canada itself that they sought the unity and the prosperity
+ they had not found at home. Many looked to Washington, some for
+ unrestricted trade, a few for political union. Others looked to London,
+ hoping for a revival of the old imperial tariff preferences or for some
+ closer political union which would bring commercial advantages in its
+ train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The decade from 1885 to 1895 stands out in the record of the relations of
+ the English-speaking peoples as a time of constant friction, of petty pin
+ pricks, of bluster and retaliation. The United States was not in a
+ neighborly mood. The memories of 1776, of 1812, and of 1861 had been kept
+ green by exuberant comment in school textbooks and by "spread-eagle"
+ oratory. The absence of any other rivalry concentrated American opposition
+ on Great Britain, and isolation from Old World interests encouraged a
+ provincial lack of responsibility. The sins of England in Ireland had been
+ kept to the fore by the agitation of Parnell and Davitt and Dillon; and
+ the failure of Home Rule measures, twice in this decade, stirred
+ Irish-American antagonism. The accession to power of Lord Salisbury,
+ reputed to hold the United States in contempt, and later the foolish
+ indiscretion of Sir Lionel Sackville-West, British Ambassador at
+ Washington, in intervening in a guileless way in the presidential election
+ of 1888, did as much to nourish ill-will in the United States as the
+ dominance of Blaine and other politicians who cultivated the gentle art of
+ twisting the tail of the British lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Protection, with the attitude of economic warfare which it involved and
+ bred, was then at its height. Much of this hostility was directed against
+ Canada, as the nearest British territory. The Dominion, on its part, while
+ persistently seeking closer trade relations, sometimes sought this end in
+ unwise ways. Many good people in Canada were still fighting the War of
+ 1812. The desire to use the inshore fishery privileges as a lever to force
+ tariff reductions led to a rigid and literal enforcement of Canadian
+ rights and claims which provoked widespread anger in New England. The
+ policy of discrimination in canal tolls in favor of Canadian as against
+ United States ports was none the less irritating because it was a retort
+ in kind. And when United States customs officials levied a tax on the tin
+ cans containing fish free by treaty, Canadian officials had retaliated by
+ taxing the baskets containing duty-free peaches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important specific issue was once more the northeastern
+ fisheries. As a result of notice given by the United States the fisheries
+ clauses of the Treaty of Washington ceased to operate on July 1, 1885.
+ Canada, for the sake of peace, admitted American fishing vessels for the
+ rest of that season, though Canadian fish at once became dutiable. No
+ further grace was given. The Canadian authorities rigidly enforced the
+ rules barring inshore fishing, and in addition denied port privileges to
+ deep-sea fishing vessels and forbade American boats to enter Canadian
+ ports for the purpose of trans-shipping crews, purchasing bait, or
+ shipping fish in bond to the United States. Every time a Canadian fishery
+ cruiser and a Gloucester skipper had a difference of opinion as to the
+ exact whereabouts of the three-mile limit, the press of both countries
+ echoed the conflict. Congress in 1887 empowered the President to retaliate
+ by excluding Canadian vessels and goods from American ports. Happily this
+ power was not used. Cleveland and Secretary of State Bayard were genuinely
+ anxious to have the issue settled. A joint commission drew up a
+ well-considered plan, but in the face of a presidential election the
+ Senate gave it short shrift. Fortunately, however, a modus vivendi was
+ arranged by which American vessels were admitted to port privileges on
+ payment of a license. Healing time, a healthful lack of publicity,
+ changing fishing methods, and Canada's abandonment of her old policy of
+ using fishing privileges as a makeweight, gradually eased the friction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet if it was not the fishing question, there was sure to be some other
+ issue&mdash;bonding privileges, Canadian Pacific interloping in western
+ rail hauls, tariff rates, or canal tolls-to disturb the peace. Why not
+ seek a remedy once for all, men now began to ask, by ending the unnatural
+ separation between the halves of the continent which God and geography had
+ joined and history and perverse politicians had kept asunder?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political union of Canada and the United States has always found
+ advocates. In the United States a large proportion, perhaps a majority, of
+ the people have until recently considered that the absorption of Canada
+ into the Republic was its manifest destiny, though there has been little
+ concerted effort to hasten fate. In Canada such course of action has found
+ much less backing. United Empire Loyalist traditions, the ties with
+ Britain constantly renewed by immigration, the dim stirrings of national
+ sentiment, resentment against the trade policy of the United States, have
+ all helped to turn popular sentiment into other channels. Only at two
+ periods, in 1849, and forty years later, has there been any active
+ movement for annexation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the late eighties, as in the late forties, commercial depression and
+ racial strife prepared the soil for the seed of annexation. The chief
+ sower in the later period was a brilliant Oxford don, Goldwin Smith, whose
+ sympathy with the cause of the North had brought him to the United States.
+ In 1871, after a brief residence at Cornell, he made his home in Toronto,
+ with high hopes of stimulating the intellectual life and molding the
+ political future of the colony. He so far forsook the strait "Manchester
+ School" of his upbringing as to support Macdonald's campaign for
+ protection in 1878. But that was the limit of his adaptability. To the end
+ he remained out of touch with Canadian feeling. His campaign for
+ annexation, or for the reunion of the English-speaking peoples on this
+ continent, as he preferred to call it, was able and persistent but moved
+ only a narrow circle of readers. It was in vain that he offered the
+ example of Scotland's prosperity after her union with her southern
+ neighbor, or insisted that Canada was cut into four distinct and unrelated
+ sections each of which could find its natural complement only in the
+ territory to the south. Here and there an editor or a minor politician
+ lent some support to his views, but the great mass of the people strongly
+ condemned the movement. There was to be no going back to the parting of
+ the ways: the continent north of Mexico was henceforth to witness two
+ experiments in democracy, not one unwieldy venture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Commercial union was a half-way measure which found more favor. A North
+ American customs union had been supported by such public men as Stephen A.
+ Douglas, Horace Greeley, and William H. Seward, by official investigators
+ such as Taylor, Derby, and Larned, and by committees of the House of
+ Representatives in 1862, 1876, 1880, and 1884. In Canada it had been
+ endorsed before Confederation by Isaac Buchanan, the father of the
+ protection movement, and by Luther Holton and John Young. Now for the
+ first time it became a practical question. Erastus Wiman, a Canadian who
+ had found fortune in the United States, began in 1887 a vigorous campaign
+ in its favor both in Congress and among the Canadian public. Goldwin Smith
+ lent his dubious aid, leading Toronto and Montreal newspapers joined the
+ movement, and Ontario farmers' organizations swung to its support. But the
+ agitation proved abortive owing to the triumph of high protection in the
+ presidential election of 1888; and in Canada the red herring of the
+ Jesuits' Estates controversy was drawn across the trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the question would not down. The political parties were compelled to
+ define their attitude. The Liberals had been defeated once more in the
+ election of 1887, where the continuance of the National Policy and of aid
+ to the Canadian Pacific had been the issue. Their leader, Edward Blake,
+ had retired disheartened. His place had been taken by a young Quebec
+ lieutenant, Wilfrid Laurier, who had won fame by his courageous resistance
+ to clerical aggression in his own province and by his indictment of the
+ Macdonald Government in the Riel issue. A veteran Ontario Liberal, Sir
+ Richard Cartwright, urged the adoption of commercial union as the party
+ policy. Laurier would not go so far, and the policy of unrestricted
+ reciprocity was made the official programme in 1888. Commercial union had
+ involved not only absolute free trade between Canada and the United States
+ but common excise rates, a common tariff against the rest of the world,
+ and the division of customs and excise revenues in some agreed proportion.
+ Unrestricted reciprocity would mean free trade between the two countries,
+ but with each left free to levy what rates it pleased on the products of
+ other countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in 1891 the time came round once more for a general election, it was
+ apparent that reciprocity in some form would be the dominant issue. Though
+ the Republicans were in power in the United States and though they had
+ more than fulfilled their high tariff pledges in the McKinley Act, which
+ hit Canadian farm products particularly hard, there was some chance of
+ terms being made. Reciprocity, as a form of tariff bargaining, really fits
+ in better with protection than with free trade, and Blaine, Harrison's
+ Secretary of State, was committed to a policy of trade treaties and trade
+ bargaining. In Canada the demand for the United States market had grown
+ with increasing depression. The Liberals, with their policy of
+ unrestricted reciprocity, seemed destined to reap the advantage of this
+ rising tide of feeling. Then suddenly, on the eve of the election, Sir
+ John Macdonald sought to cut the ground from under the feet of his
+ opponents by the announcement that in the course of a discussion of
+ Newfoundland matters the United States had taken the initiative in
+ suggesting to Canada a settlement of all outstanding difficulties,
+ fisheries, coasting trade, and, on the basis of a renewal and extension of
+ the Reciprocity Treaty of 1854. This policy promised to meet all
+ legitimate economic needs of the country and at the same time avoid the
+ political dangers of the more sweeping policy. Its force was somewhat
+ weakened by the denials of Secretary Blaine that he had taken the
+ initiative or made any definite promises. As the election drew near and
+ revelations of the annexationist aims of some supporters of the wider
+ trade policy were made, the Government made the loyalty cry its strong
+ card. "The old man, the old flag, and the old policy," saved the day. In
+ Ontario and Quebec the two parties were evenly divided, but the West and
+ the Maritime Provinces, the "shreds and patches of Confederation," as Sir
+ Richard Cartwright, too ironic and vitriolic in his speech for political
+ success, termed them, gave the Government a working majority, which was
+ increased in by-elections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again in power, the Government made a formal attempt to carry out its
+ pledges. Two pilgrimages were made to Washington, but the negotiators were
+ too far apart to come to terms. With the triumph of the Democrats in 1899.
+ and the lowering of the tariff on farm products which followed, there came
+ a temporary improvement in trade relations. But the tariff reaction and
+ the silver issue brought back the Republicans and led to that climax in
+ agricultural protection, the Dingley Act of 1897, which killed among
+ Canadians all reciprocity longings and compelled them to look to
+ themselves for salvation. Although Canadians were anxious for trade
+ relations, they were not willing to be bludgeoned into accepting one-sided
+ terms. The settlement of the Bering Sea dispute in 1898 by a board of
+ arbitration, which ruled against the claims of the United States but
+ suggested a restriction of pelagic sealing by agreement, removed one
+ source of friction. Hardly was that out of the way when Cleveland's
+ Venezuela message brought Great Britain and the United States once more to
+ the verge of war. In such a war Canadians knew they would be the chief
+ sufferers, but in 1895, as in 1862, they did not flinch and stood ready to
+ support the mother country in any outcome. The Venezuela episode stirred
+ Canadian feeling deeply, revived interest in imperialism, and ended the
+ last lingering remnants of any sentiment for annexation. As King Edward I
+ was termed "the hammer of the Scots," so McKinley and Cleveland became
+ "the hammer of the Canadians," welding them into unity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While most Canadians were ceasing to look to Washington for relief, an
+ increasing number were looking once more to London. The revival of
+ imperial sentiment which began in the early eighties, seemed to promise
+ new and greater possibilities for the colonies overseas. Political union
+ in the form of imperial federation and commercial union through reciprocal
+ tariff preferences were urged in turn as the cure for all Canada's ills.
+ Neither solution was adopted. The movement greatly influenced the actual
+ trend of affairs, but there was to be no mere turning back to the days of
+ the old empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period of laissez faire in imperial matters, of Little Englandism,
+ drew to a close in the early eighties. Once more men began to value
+ empire, to seek to annex new territory overseas, and to bind closer the
+ existing possessions. The world was passing through a reaction destined to
+ lead to the earth-shaking catastrophe of 1914. The ideals of peace and
+ free trade preached and to some degree practiced in the fifties and
+ sixties were passing under an eclipse. In Europe the swing to free trade
+ had halted, and nation after nation was becoming aggressively
+ protectionist. The triumph of Prussia in the War of 1870 revived and
+ intensified military rivalry and military preparations on the part of all
+ the powers of Europe. A new scramble for colonies and possessions overseas
+ began, with the late comers nervously eager to make up for time lost. In
+ this reaction Britain shared. Protection raised its head again in England;
+ only by tariffs and tariff bargaining, the Fair Traders insisted, could
+ the country hold its own. Odds and ends of territory overseas were annexed
+ and a new value was attached to the existing colonies. The possibility of
+ obtaining from them military support and trade privileges, the
+ desirability of returning to the old ideal of a self-contained and
+ centralized empire, appealed now to influential groups. This goal might be
+ attained by different paths. From the United Kingdom came the policy of
+ imperial federation and from the colonies the policy of preferential trade
+ as means to this end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1884 the Imperial Federation League was organized in London with
+ important men of both parties in its ranks. It urged the setting up in
+ London of a new Parliament, in which the United Kingdom and all the
+ colonies where white men predominated would be represented according to
+ population. This Parliament would have power to frame policies, to make
+ laws, and to levy taxes for the whole Empire. To the colonist it offered
+ an opportunity to share in the control of foreign affairs; to the
+ Englishman it offered the support of colonies fast growing to power and
+ the assurance of one harmonious policy for all the Empire. Both in Britain
+ and overseas the movement received wide support and seemed for a time
+ likely to sweep all before it. Then a halt came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imperial federation had been brought forward a generation too late to
+ succeed. The Empire had been developing upon lines which could not be made
+ to conform to the plans for centralized parliamentary control. It was not
+ possible to go back to the parting of the ways. Slowly, unconsciously,
+ unevenly, yet steadily, the colonies had been ceasing to be dependencies
+ and had been becoming nations. With Canada in the vanguard they had been
+ taking over one power after another which had formerly been wielded by the
+ Government of the United Kingdom. It was not likely that they would
+ relinquish these powers or that self-governing colonies would consent to
+ be subordinated to a Parliament in London in which each would have only a
+ fragmentary representation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of imperial cooperation which began to take shape during this
+ period sought to reconcile the existing desire for continuing the
+ connection with the mother country with the growing sense of national
+ independence. This policy involved two different courses of action: first,
+ the colonies must assert and secure complete self-government on terms of
+ equality with the United Kingdom; second, they must unite as partners or
+ allies in carrying out common tasks and policies and in building up
+ machinery for mutual consultation and harmonious action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was chiefly in matters of trade and tariffs that progress was made in
+ the direction of self-government. Galt had asserted in 1859 Canada's right
+ to make her own tariffs, and Macdonald twenty years later had carried
+ still further the policy of levying duties upon English as well as foreign
+ goods. That economic point was therefore settled, but it was a slower
+ matter to secure control of treaty-making powers. When Galt and Huntington
+ urged this right in 1871 and when Blake and Mackenzie pressed it ten years
+ later, Macdonald opposed such a demand as equivalent to an effort for
+ independence. Yet he himself was compelled to change his conservative
+ attitude. After 1877 Canada ceased to be bound by commercial treaties made
+ by the United Kingdom, unless it expressly desired to be included. In 1879
+ Galt was sent to Europe to negotiate Canadian trade agreements with France
+ and Spain; and in the next decade Tupper carried negotiations with France
+ to a successful conclusion, though the treaty was formally concluded
+ between France and Britain. By 1891 the Canadian Parliament could assert
+ with truth that "the self-governing colonies are recognized as possessing
+ the right to define their respective fiscal relations to all countries."
+ But Canada as yet took no step toward assuming a share in her own naval
+ defense, though the Australasian colonies made a beginning, along colonial
+ rather than national lines, by making a money contribution to the British
+ navy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second task confronting the policy of imperial cooperation was a
+ harder one. For a partnership between colony and mother country there were
+ no precedents. Centralized empires there had been; colonies there had been
+ which had grown into independent states; but there was no instance of an
+ empire ceasing to be an empire, of colonies becoming self-governing states
+ and then turning to closer and cooperative union with one another and with
+ the mother country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along this unblazed trail two important advances were made. The initiative
+ in the first came from Canada. In 1880 a High Commissioner was appointed
+ to represent Canada in London. The appointment of Sir Alexander Galt and
+ the policy which it involved were significant. The Governor-General had
+ ceased to be a real power; he was becoming the representative not of the
+ British Government but of the King; and, like the King, he governed by the
+ advice of the responsible ministers in the land where he resided. His
+ place as the link between the Government of Canada and the Government of
+ Britain was now taken in part by the High Commissioner. The relationship
+ of Canada to the United Kingdom was becoming one of equality not of
+ subordination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The initiative in the second step came from Britain, though Canada's
+ leaders gave the movement its final direction. Imperial federationists
+ urged Lord Salisbury to summon a conference of the colonies to discuss the
+ question they had at heart. Salisbury doubted the wisdom of such a policy
+ but agreed in 1887 to call a conference to discuss matters of trade and
+ defense. Every self-governing colony sent representatives to this first
+ Colonial Conference; but little immediate fruit came of its sessions. In
+ 1894 a second Conference was held at Ottawa, mainly to discuss
+ intercolonial preferential trade. Only a beginning had been made, but
+ already the Conferences were coming to be regarded as meetings of
+ independent governments and not, as the federationists had hoped, the germ
+ of a single dominating new government. The Imperial Federation League
+ began to realize that it was making little progress and dissolved in 1893.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Preferential trade was the alternative path to imperial federation.
+ Macdonald had urged it in 1879 when he found British resentment strong
+ against his new tariff. Again, ten years later, when reciprocity with the
+ United States was finding favor in Canada, imperialists urged the
+ counterclaims of a policy of imperial reciprocity, of special tariff
+ privileges to other parts of the Empire. The stumbling-block in the way of
+ such a policy was England's adherence to free trade. For the protectionist
+ colonies preference would mean only a reduction of an existing tariff. For
+ the United Kingdom, however, it would mean a complete reversal of fiscal
+ policy and the abandonment of free trade for protection in order to make
+ discrimination possible. Few Englishmen believed such a reversal possible,
+ though every trade depression revived talk of "fair trade" or tariffs for
+ bargaining purposes. A further obstacle to preferential trade lay in the
+ existence of treaties with Belgium and Germany, concluded in the sixties,
+ assuring them all tariff privileges granted by any British colony to Great
+ Britain or to sister colonies. In 1892 the Liberal Opposition in Canada
+ indicated the line upon which action was eventually to be taken by urging
+ a resolution in favor of granting an immediate and unconditional
+ preference on British goods as a step toward freer trade and in the
+ interest of the Canadian consumer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little came of looking either to London or to Washington. Until the middle
+ nineties Canada remained commercially stagnant and politically distracted.
+ Then came a change of heart and a change of policy. The Dominion realized
+ at last that it must work out its own salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March, 1891, Sir John Macdonald was returned to office for the sixth
+ time since Confederation, but he was not destined to enjoy power long. The
+ winter campaign had been too much for his weakened constitution, and he
+ died on June 6, 1891. No man had been more hated by his political
+ opponents, no man more loved by his political followers. Today the hatred
+ has long since died, and the memory of Sir John Macdonald has become the
+ common pride of Canadians of every party, race, and creed. He had done
+ much to lower the level of Canadian politics; but this fault was forgiven
+ when men remembered his unfailing courage and confidence, his constructive
+ vision and fertility of resource, his deep and unquestioned devotion to
+ his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Conservative party had with difficulty survived the last election.
+ Deprived of the leader who for so long had been half its force, the party
+ could not long delay its break-up. No one could be found to fill
+ Macdonald's place. The helm was taken in turn by J. J. C. Abbott, "the
+ confidential family lawyer of the party," by Sir John Thompson, solid and
+ efficient though lacking in imagination, and by Sir Mackenzie Bowell, an
+ Ontario veteran. Abbott was forced to resign because of ill health;
+ Thompson died in office; and Bowell was forced out by a revolt within the
+ party. Sir Charles Tupper, then High Commissioner in London, was summoned
+ to take up the difficult task. But it proved too great for even his
+ fighting energy. The party was divided. Gross corruption in the awarding
+ of public contracts had been brought to light. The farmers were demanding
+ a lower tariff. The leader of the Opposition was proving to have all the
+ astuteness and the mastery of his party which had marked Macdonald and a
+ courage in his convictions which promised well. Defeat seemed inevitable
+ unless a new issue which had invaded federal politics, the Manitoba school
+ question, should prove more dangerous to the Opposition than to the forces
+ of the Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Manitoba school question was an echo of the racial and religious
+ strife which followed the execution of Riel and in which the Jesuits'
+ Estates controversy was an episode. In the early days of the province,
+ when it was still uncertain which religion would be dominant among the
+ settlers, a system of state-aided denominational schools had been
+ established. In 1890 the Manitoba Government swept this system away and
+ replaced it by a single system of non-sectarian and state-supported
+ schools which were practically the same as the old Protestant schools. Any
+ Roman Catholic who did not wish to send his children to such a school was
+ thus compelled to pay for the maintenance of a parochial school as well as
+ to pay taxes for the public schools. A provision of the Confederation Act,
+ inserted at the wish of the Protestant minority in Quebec, safeguarded the
+ educational privileges of religious minorities. A somewhat similar clause
+ had been inserted in the Manitoba Act of 1870. To this protection the
+ Manitoba minority now appealed. The courts held that the province had the
+ right to pass the law but also that the Dominion Government had the
+ constitutional right to pass remedial legislation restoring in some
+ measure the privileges taken away. The issue was thus forced into federal
+ politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A curious situation then developed. The leader of the Government, Sir
+ Mackenzie Bowell, was a prominent Orangeman. The leader of the Opposition,
+ Wilfrid Laurier, was a Roman Catholic. The Government, after a vain
+ attempt to induce the province to amend its measure, decided to pass a
+ remedial act compelling it to restore to the Roman Catholics their rights.
+ The policy of the Opposition leader was awaited with keen expectancy.
+ Strong pressure was brought upon Laurier by the Roman Catholic hierarchy
+ of Quebec. Most men expected a temporizing compromise. Yet the leader of
+ the Opposition came out strongly and flatly against the Government's
+ measure. He agreed that a wrong had been done but insisted that compulsion
+ could not right it and promised that, if in power, he would follow the
+ path of conciliation. At once all the wrath of the hierarchy was unloosed
+ upon him, and all its influence was thrown to the support of the
+ Government. Yet when the Liberals blocked the Remedial Bill by obstructing
+ debate until the term of Parliament expired, and forced an election on
+ this issue in the summer of 1896, Quebec gave a big majority to Laurier,
+ while Manitoba stood behind the party which had tried to coerce it. The
+ country over, the Liberals had gained a decisive majority. The day of new
+ leaders and anew policy had dawned at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. THE YEARS OF FULFILMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Wilfrid Laurier was summoned to form his first Cabinet in July, 1896. For
+ eighteen years previous to that time the Liberals had sat in what one of
+ their number used to call "the cold shades of Opposition." For half of
+ that term Laurier had been leader of the party, confined to the negative
+ task of watching and criticizing the administration of his great
+ predecessor and of the four premiers who followed in almost as many years.
+ Now he was called to constructive tasks. Fortune favored him by bringing
+ him to power at the very turn of the tide; but he justified fortune's
+ favor by so steering the ship of state as to take full advantage of wind
+ and current. Through four Parliaments, through fifteen years of office,
+ through the time of fruition of so many long-deferred hopes, he was to
+ guide the destinies of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laurier began his work by calling to his Cabinet not merely the party
+ leaders in the federal arena but four of the outstanding provincial
+ Liberals&mdash;Oliver Mowat, Premier of Ontario, William S. Fielding,
+ Premier of Nova Scotia, Andrew G. Blair, Premier of New Brunswick, and, a
+ few months later, Clifford Sifton of Manitoba. The Ministry was the
+ strongest in individual capacity that the Dominion had yet possessed. The
+ prestige of the provincial leaders, all men of long experience and tested
+ shrewdness, strengthened the Administration in quarters where it otherwise
+ would have been weak, for there had been many who doubted whether the
+ untried Liberal party could provide capable administrators. There had also
+ been many who doubted the expediency of making Prime Minister a
+ French-Canadian Catholic. Such doubters were reassured by the presence of
+ Mowat and Fielding, until the Prime Minister himself had proved the wisdom
+ of the choice. There were others who admitted Laurier's personal charm and
+ grace but doubted whether he had the political strength to control a party
+ of conflicting elements and to govern a country where different race and
+ diverging religious and sectional interests set men at odds. Here again
+ time proved such fears to be groundless. Long before Laurier's long term
+ of office had ended, any distrust was transformed into the charge of his
+ opponents that he played the dictator. His courtly manners were found not
+ to hide weakness but to cover strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first task of the new Government was to settle the Manitoba school
+ question. Negotiations which were at once begun with the provincial
+ Government were doubtless made easier by the fact that the same party was
+ in power at Ottawa and at Winnipeg, but it was not this fact alone which
+ brought agreement. The Laurier Government, unlike its predecessor, did not
+ insist on the restoration of separate schools. It accepted a compromise
+ which retained the single system of public schools, but which provided
+ religious teaching in the last half hour of school and, where numbers
+ warranted, a teacher of the same faith as the pupils. The compromise was
+ violently denounced by the Roman Catholic hierarchy but, except in two
+ cities, where parochial schools were set up, it was accepted by the laity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this thorny question out of the way, the Government turned to what it
+ recognized as its greatest task, the promotion of the country's material
+ prosperity. For years industry had been at a standstill. Exports and
+ imports had ceased to expand; railway building had halted; emigrants
+ outnumbered immigrants. The West, the center of so many hopes, the object
+ of so many sacrifices, had not proved the El Dorado so eagerly sought by
+ fortune hunters and home builders. There were little over two hundred
+ thousand white men west of the Great Lakes. Homesteads had been offered
+ freely; but in 1896 only eighteen hundred were taken up, and less than a
+ third of these by Canadians from the East. The stock of the Canadian
+ Pacific was selling at fifty. All but a few had begun to lose faith in the
+ promise of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly a change came. The failure of the West to lure pioneers was
+ not due to poverty of soil or lack of natural riches: its resources were
+ greater than the most reckless orator had dreamed. It was merely that its
+ time had not come and that the men in charge of the country's affairs had
+ not thrown enough energy into the task of speeding the coming of that
+ time. Now fortune worked with Canada, not against it. The long and steady
+ fall of prices, and particularly of the prices of farm products, ended;
+ and a rapid rise began to make farming pay once more. The good free lands
+ of the United States had nearly all been taken up. Canada's West was now
+ the last great reserve of free and fertile land. Improvements in farming
+ methods made it possible to cope with the peculiar problems of prairie
+ husbandry. British capital, moreover, no longer found so ready an outlet
+ in the United States, which was now financing its own development; and it
+ had suffered severe losses in Argentine smashes and Australian droughts.
+ Capital, therefore, was free to turn to Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not enough merely to have the resources; it was essential to
+ display them and to disclose their value. Canada needed millions of men of
+ the right stock, and fortunately there were millions who needed Canada.
+ The work of the Government was to put the facts before these potential
+ settlers. The new Minister of the Interior, Clifford Sifton, himself a
+ western man, at once began an immigration campaign which has never been
+ equaled in any country for vigor and practical efficiency. Canada had
+ hitherto received few settlers direct from the Continent. Western Europe
+ was now prosperous, and emigrants were few. But eastern Europe was in a
+ ferment, and thousands were ready to swarm to new homes overseas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The activities of a subsidized immigration agency, the North Atlantic
+ Trading Company, brought great numbers of these peoples. Foremost in
+ numbers were the Ruthenians from Galicia. Most distinctive were the
+ Doukhobors or Spirit Wrestlers of Southern Russia, about ten thousand of
+ whom were brought to Canada at the instance of Tolstoy and some English
+ Quakers to escape persecution for their refusal to undertake military
+ service. The religious fanaticism of the Doukhobors, particularly when it
+ took the form of midwinter pilgrimages in nature's garb, and the
+ clannishness of the Ruthenians, who settled in solid blocks, gave rise to
+ many problems of government and assimilation which taught Canadians the
+ unwisdom of inviting immigration from eastern or southern Europe.
+ Ruthenians and Poles, however, continued to come down to the eve of the
+ Great War, and nearly all settled on western lands. Jewish Poland sent its
+ thousands who settled in the larger cities, until Montreal had more Jews
+ than Jerusalem and its Protestant schools held their Easter holidays in
+ Passover. Italian navvies came also by the thousands, but mainly as birds
+ of passage; and Greeks and men from the Balkan States were limited in
+ numbers. Of the three million immigrants who came to Canada from the
+ beginning of the century to the outbreak of the war, some eight hundred
+ thousand came from continental Europe, and of these the Ruthenians, Jews,
+ Italians, and Scandinavians were the most numerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the United States that Canada made the greatest efforts to
+ obtain settlers and that she achieved the most striking success. Beginning
+ in 1897 advertisements were placed in five or six thousand American farm
+ and weekly newspapers. Booklets were distributed by the million. Hundreds
+ of farmer delegates were given free trips through the promised land.
+ Agents were appointed in each likely State, with sub-agents who were paid
+ a bonus on every actual settler. The first settlers sent back word of
+ limitless land to be had for a song, and of No. 1 Northern Wheat that ran
+ thirty or forty bushels to the acre. Soon immigration from the States
+ began; the trickle became a trek; the trek, a stampede. In 1896 the
+ immigrants from the United States to Canada had been so few as not to be
+ recorded; in 1897 there were 2000; in 1899, 12,000; in the fiscal year
+ 1902-03, 50,000; and in 1912-13, 139,000. The new immigrants proved to be
+ the best of settlers; nearly all were progressive farmers experienced in
+ western methods and possessed of capital. The countermovement from Canada
+ to the United States never wholly ceased, but it slackened and was much
+ more than offset by this northward rush. Nothing so helped to confirm
+ Canadian confidence in their own land and to make the outside world share
+ this high estimate as this unimpeachable evidence from over a million
+ American newcomers who found in Canada, between 1897 and 1914, greater
+ opportunities than even the United States could offer. The Ministry then
+ carried its propaganda to Great Britain. Newspapers, schools, exhibitions
+ were used in ways which startled the stolid Englishman into attention.
+ Circumstances played into the hands of the propagandists, who took
+ advantage of the flow of United States settlers into the West, the
+ Klondike gold fields rush, the presence of Laurier at the Jubilee
+ festivities at London in 1897, Canada's share in the Boer War. British
+ immigrants rose to 50,000 in 1903-04, to 120,000 in 1907-08, and to
+ 150,000 in 1912-13. From 1897 to the outbreak of the war over 1,100,000
+ Britishers came to Canada. Three out of four were English, the rest mainly
+ Scotch; the Irish, who once had come in tens of thousands and whose
+ descendants still formed the largest element in the English-speaking
+ peoples of Canada, now sent only one man for every twelve from England.
+ The gates of Canadian immigration, however, were not thrown open to all
+ comers. The criminal, the insane and feeble-minded, the diseased, and
+ others likely to become public charges, were barred altogether or allowed
+ to remain provisionally, subject to deportation within three years.
+ Immigrants sent out by British charitable societies were subjected, after
+ 1908, to rigid inspection before leaving England. No immigrant was
+ admitted without sufficient money in his purse to tide over the first few
+ weeks, unless he were going to farm work or responsible relatives.
+ Asiatics were restricted by special regulations. Steadily the bars were
+ raised higher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not all the 3,000,000 who came to Canada between 1897 and 1914 remained.
+ Many drifted across the border; many returned to their old homes, their
+ dreams fulfilled or shattered; yet the vast majority remained. Never had
+ any country so great a task of assimilation as faced Canada, with
+ 3,000,000 pouring into a country of 5,000,000 in a dozen years.
+ Fortunately the great bulk of the newcomers were of the old stocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Closely linked with immigration in promoting the prosperity of the country
+ were the land policy and the railway policy of the Administration. The
+ system of granting free homesteads to settlers was continued on an even
+ more generous scale. The 1800 entries for homesteads in 1896 had become
+ 40,000 ten years later. In 1906 land equal in area to Massachusetts and
+ Delaware was given away; in 1908 a Wales, in 1909 five Prince Edward
+ Islands, and in 1910 and 1911 a Belgium, a Netherlands, and two
+ Montenegros passed from the state to the settler. Unfortunately not every
+ homesteader became an active farmer, and production, though mounting fast,
+ could not keep pace with speculation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Railway building had almost ceased after the completion of the Canadian
+ Pacific system. Now it revived on a greater scale than ever before. In the
+ twenty years after 1896 the miles in operation grew from 16,000 to nearly
+ 40,000. Two new transcontinentals were added, and the older roads took on
+ a new lease of life. At the end of this period of expansion, only the
+ United States, Germany, and Russia had railroad mileage exceeding that of
+ Canada. Much of the building was premature or duplicated other roads. The
+ scramble for state aid, federal and provincial, had demoralized Canadian
+ politics. A large part of the notes the country rashly backed, by the
+ policy of guaranteeing bond issues, were in time presented for payment.
+ Yet the railway policies of the period were broadly justified. New country
+ was opened to settlers; outlets to the sea were provided; capital was
+ obtained in the years when it was still abundant and cheap; the whole
+ industry of the country was stimulated; East was bound closer to West and
+ depth was added to length.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * During the Great War it became necessary for the Federal
+ Government to take over both the National Transcontinental,
+ running from Moncton in New Brunswick to Winnipeg, and the
+ Canadian Northern, running from ocean to ocean, and to
+ incorporate both, along with the Intercolonial, in the
+ Canadian National Railways, a system fourteen thousand miles
+ in length.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The opening of the West brought new prosperity to every corner of the
+ East. Factories found growing markets; banks multiplied branches and
+ business; exports mounted fast and imports faster; closer relations were
+ formed with London and New York financial interests; mushroom
+ millionaires, country clubs, city slums, suburban subdivisions, land
+ booms, grafting aldermen, and all the apparatus of an advanced
+ civilization grew apace. A new self-confidence became the dominant note
+ alike of private business and of public policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With industrial prosperity, political unity became assured. Canada became
+ more and more a name of which all her sons were proud. Expansion brought
+ men of the different provinces together. The Maritime Provinces first felt
+ fully at one with the rest of Canada when Vancouver and Winnipeg rather
+ than Boston and New York called their sons. Even Ontario and Quebec made
+ some advance toward mutual understanding, though clerical leaders who
+ sought safety for their Church in the isolation of its people,
+ imperialists who drove a wedge between Canadians by emphasizing
+ Anglo-Saxon racial ties, and politicians of the baser sort exploiting race
+ prejudice for their own gain, opened rifts in a society already seamed by
+ differences of language and creed. In the West unity was still harder to
+ secure, for men of all countries and of none poured into a land still in
+ the shaping. The divergent interests of the farming, free trade West and
+ of the manufacturing, protectionist East made for friction. Fortunately
+ strong ties held East and West together. Eastern Canadians or their sons
+ filled most of the strategic posts in Government and business, in school
+ and church and press in the West. Transcontinental railways, chartered
+ banks with branches and interests in every province, political parties
+ organizing their forces from coast to coast, played their part. Much had
+ been accomplished; but much remained to be done. With this background of
+ rapid industrial development and growing national unity, Canada's
+ relations with the Empire, with her sister democracy across the border,
+ and with foreign states, took on new importance and divided interest with
+ the changes in her internal affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From being a state wherein the mother country exercised control and the
+ colonies yielded obedience the Empire was rapidly being transformed into a
+ free and equal partnership of independent commonwealths under one king.
+ Out of the clash of rival theories and conflicting interests a new ideal
+ and a new reality had developed. The policy of imperial cooperation&mdash;the
+ policy whereby each great colony became independent of outside control but
+ voluntarily acted in concert with the mother country and the sister states
+ on matters of common concern&mdash;sought to reconcile liberty and unity,
+ nationhood and empire, to unite what was most practicable in the aims of
+ the advocates of independence and the advocates of imperial federation.
+ The movement developed unevenly. At the outbreak of the Great War, it was
+ still incomplete. The ideal was not always clearly or consciously held in
+ the Empire itself and was wholly ignored or misunderstood in Europe and
+ even in the United States. Yet in twenty years' space it had become
+ dominant in practice and theory and had built up a new type of political
+ organization, a virtual league of nations, fruitful for the future
+ ordering of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three fields in which this new policy was worked out were trade,
+ defense, and political organization. Canada had asserted her right to
+ control her tariff and commercial treaty relations as she pleased. Now she
+ used this freedom to offer, without asking any return in kind, tariff
+ privileges to the mother country. In the first budget brought down by the
+ Minister of Finance in the Laurier Cabinet, William S. Fielding, a
+ reduction, by instalments, of twenty-five per cent in tariff duties was
+ offered to all countries with rates as low as Canada's&mdash;that is, to
+ the United Kingdom and possibly to the Netherlands and New South Wales.
+ The reduction was meant both as a fulfilment of the Liberal party's free
+ trade pledges and as a token of filial good will to Britain. It was soon
+ found that Belgium and Germany, by virtue of their special treaty rights,
+ would claim the same privileges as Britain, and that all other countries
+ with most favored nation clauses could then demand the same rates. This
+ might serve the free trade aims of the Fielding tariff but would block its
+ imperial purpose. If this purpose was to be achieved, these treaties must
+ be denounced. To effect this was one of the tasks Laurier undertook in his
+ first visit to England in 1897.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria, celebrating the sixtieth
+ anniversary of her reign, was made the occasion for holding the third
+ Colonial Conference. It was attended by the Premiers of all the colonies.
+ Among them Wilfrid Laurier, or Sir Wilfrid as he now became, stood easily
+ preeminent. In the Jubilee festivities, among the crowds in London streets
+ and the gatherings in court and council, his picturesque and courtly
+ figure, his unmistakable note of distinction, his silvery eloquence, and,
+ not least, the fact that this ruler of the greatest of England's colonies
+ was wholly of French blood, made him the lion of the hour. In the Colonial
+ Conference, presided over by Joseph Chamberlain, the new Colonial
+ Secretary, Laurier achieved his immediate purpose. The British Government
+ agreed to denounce the Belgian and German treaties, now that the
+ preference granted her came as a free gift and not as part of a bargain
+ which involved Britain's abandonment of free trade. The other Premiers
+ agreed to consider whether Canada's preferential tariff policy could be
+ followed. Chamberlain in vain urged defense and political policies
+ designed to centralize power in London. He praised the action of the
+ Australian colonies in contributing money to the British navy but could
+ get no promise of similar action from the others. He urged the need of
+ setting up in London an imperial council, with power somewhat more than
+ advisory and likely "to develop into something still greater," but for
+ this scheme he elicited little support. After the Conference Sir Wilfrid
+ visited France and in ringing speeches in Paris did much to pave the way
+ for the good understanding which later developed into the entente
+ cordiale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The glitter and parade of the Jubilee festivities soon gave way to a
+ sterner phase of empire. For years South Africa had been in ferment owing
+ to the conflicting interests of narrow, fanatical, often corrupt Boer
+ leaders, greedy Anglo-Jewish mining magnates, and British
+ statesmen-Rhodes, Milner, Chamberlain&mdash;dominated by the imperial idea
+ and eager for an "all-red" South Africa. Eventually an impasse was reached
+ over the question of the rights and privileges of British subjects in the
+ Transvaal Republic. On October 9, 1899, President Kruger issued his
+ fateful ultimatum and war began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What would be Canada's attitude toward this imperial problem? She had
+ never before taken part in an overseas war. Neither her own safety nor the
+ safety of the mother country was considered to be at stake. Yet war had
+ not been formally declared before a demand arose among Canadians that
+ their country should take a hand in rescuing the victims of Boer tyranny.
+ The Venezuela incident and the recent Jubilee ceremonies had fanned
+ imperialist sentiment. The growing prosperity was increasing national
+ pride and making many eager to abandon the attitude of colonial dependence
+ in foreign affairs. The desire to emulate the United States, which had
+ just won more or less glory in its little war with Spain, had its
+ influence in some quarters. Belief in the justice of the British cause was
+ practically universal, thanks to the skillful manipulation of the press by
+ the war party in South Africa. Leading newspapers encouraged the campaign
+ for participation. Parliament was not in session, and the Government
+ hesitated to intervene, but the swelling tide of public opinion soon
+ warranted immediate action. Three days after the declaration of war an
+ order in council was passed providing for a contingent of one thousand
+ men. Other infantry battalions, Mounted Rifles, and batteries of artillery
+ were dispatched later. Lord Strathcona, formerly Donald Smith of the
+ Canadian Pacific syndicate, by a deed recalling feudal days, provided the
+ funds to send overseas the Strathcona Horse, roughriders from the Canadian
+ West. In the last years of the war the South African Constabulary drew
+ many recruits from Canada. All told, over seven thousand Canadians crossed
+ half the world to share in the struggle on the South African veldt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Canadian forces held their own with any in the campaign. The first
+ contingent fought under Lord Roberts in the campaign for the relief of
+ Kimberley; and it was two charges by Canadian troops, charges that cost
+ heavily in killed and wounded, that forced the surrender of General
+ Cronje, brought to bay at Paardeberg. One Canadian battery shared in the
+ honor of raising the siege of Mafeking, where Baden-Powell was besieged,
+ and both contingents marched with Lord Roberts from Bloemfontein to
+ Pretoria and fought hard and well at Doornkop and in many a skirmish.
+ Perhaps the politic generosity of the British leaders and the patriotic
+ bias of correspondents exaggerated the importance of the share of the
+ Canadian troops in the whole campaign; but their courage, initiative, and
+ endurance were tested and proved beyond all question. Paardeberg sent a
+ thrill of pride and of sorrow through Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only province which stood aloof from wholehearted participation in the
+ war was Quebec. Many French Canadians had been growing nervous over the
+ persistent campaign of the imperialists. They exhibited a certain
+ unwillingness to take on responsibilities, perhaps a survival of the
+ dependence which colonialism had bred, a dawning aspiration toward an
+ independent place in the world's work, and a disposition to draw tighter
+ racial and religious lines in order to offset the emphasis which
+ imperialists placed on Anglo-Saxon ties. Now their sympathies went out to
+ a people, like themselves an alien minority brought under British rule,
+ and in this attitude they were strengthened by the almost unanimous
+ verdict of the neutral world against British policy. Laurier tried to
+ steer a middle course, but the attacks of ultra-imperialists in Ontario
+ and of ultra-nationalists in Quebec, led henceforward by a brilliant and
+ eloquent grandson of Papineau, Henri Bourassa, hampered him at every turn.
+ The South African War gave a new unity to English-speaking Canada, but it
+ widened the gap between the French and English sections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The part which Australia and New Zealand, like Canada, had taken in the
+ war gave new urgency to the question of imperial relations. English
+ imperialists were convinced that the time was ripe for a great advance
+ toward centralization, and they were eager to crystallize in permanent
+ institutions the imperial sentiment called forth by the war. When,
+ therefore, the fourth Colonial Conference was summoned to meet in London
+ in 1902 on the occasion of the coronation of Edward VII, Chamberlain urged
+ with all his force and keenness a wide programme of centralized action.
+ "Very great expectations," he declared in his opening address, "have been
+ formed as to the results which may accrue from our meeting." The
+ expectations, however, were doomed to disappointment. He and those who
+ shared his hopes had failed to recognize that the war had called forth a
+ new national consciousness in the Dominions, as the self-governing
+ colonies now came to be termed, even more than it had developed imperial
+ sentiment. In the smaller colonies, New Zealand, Natal, Cape of Good Hope,
+ the old attitude of colonial dependence survived in larger measure; but in
+ Canada and in Australia, now federated into commonwealths, national
+ feeling was uppermost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chamberlain brought forward once more his proposal for an imperial
+ council, to be advisory at first and later to attain power to tax and
+ legislate for the whole Empire, but he found no support. Instead, the
+ Conference itself was made a more permanent instrument of imperial
+ cooperation by a provision that it should meet at least every four years.
+ The essential difference was that the Conference was merely a meeting of
+ independent Governments on an equal footing, each claiming to be as much
+ "His Majesty's Government" as any other, whereas the council which
+ Chamberlain urged in vain would have been a new Government, supreme over
+ all the Empire and dominated by the British representatives. Chamberlain
+ then suggested more centralized means of defense, grants to the British
+ navy, and the putting of a definite proportion of colonial militia at the
+ disposal of the British War Office for overseas service. The Cape and
+ Natal promised naval grants; Australia and New Zealand increased their
+ contributions for the maintenance of a squadron in Pacific waters; but
+ Canada held back. The smaller colonies were sympathetic to the militia
+ proposal; but Canada and Australia rejected it on the grounds that it was
+ "objectionable in principle, as derogating from the powers of
+ self-government enjoyed by them, and would be calculated to impede the
+ general improvement in training and organization of their defense forces."
+ Chamberlain's additional proposal of free trade within the Empire and of a
+ common tariff against all foreign countries found little support. That
+ each part of the Empire should control its own tariff and that it should
+ make what concessions it wished on British imports, either as a part of a
+ reciprocal bargain or as a free gift, remained a fixed idea in the minds
+ of the leaders of the Dominions. Throughout the sessions it was Laurier
+ rather than Chamberlain who dominated the Conference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Balked in his desire to effect political or military centralization,
+ Chamberlain turned anew to the possibilities of trade alliance. His tariff
+ reform campaign of 1903, which was a sequel to the Colonial Conference of
+ 1902, proposed that Great Britain set up a tariff, incidentally to protect
+ her own industries and to have matter for bargaining with foreign powers,
+ but mainly in order to keep the colonies within her orbit by offering them
+ special terms. In this way the Empire would become once more
+ self-sufficient. The issue thus thrust upon Great Britain and the Empire
+ in general was primarily a contest between free traders and
+ protectionists, not between the supporters of cooperation and the
+ supporters of centralization. On this basis the issue was fought out in
+ Great Britain and resulted in the overwhelming victory of free trade and
+ the Liberal party, aided as they were by the popular reaction against the
+ jingoist policy which had culminated in the war. When the fifth
+ Conference, now termed Imperial instead of Colonial, met in 1907, there
+ was much impassioned advocacy of preference and protection on the part of
+ Alfred Deakin of Australia and Sir L.S. Jameson of the Cape; but the
+ British representatives stuck to their guns and, in Winston Churchill's
+ phrase, the door remained "banged, barred, and bolted" against both
+ policies. At this conference Laurier took the ground that, while Canada
+ would be prepared to bargain preference for preference, the people of
+ Great Britain must decide what fiscal system would best serve their own
+ interests. A consistent advocate of home rule, he was willing, unlike some
+ of his colleagues, from the other Dominions, to let the United Kingdom
+ control its own affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The defense issue had slumbered since the Boer War. Now the unbounded
+ ambitions of Germany gave it startling urgency. It was about 1908 that the
+ British public first became seriously alarmed over the danger involved in
+ the lessening margin of superiority of the British over the German navy.
+ The alarm was echoed throughout the Dominions. The Kaiser's challenge
+ threatened the safety not only of the mother country but of every part of
+ the Empire. Hitherto the Dominions had done little in the way of naval
+ defense, though they had one by one assumed full responsibility for their
+ land defense. The feeling had been growing that they should take a larger
+ share of the common burden. Two factors, however, had blocked advance in
+ this direction. The British Government had claimed and exercised full
+ control of the issues of peace and war, and the Dominions were reluctant
+ to assume responsibility for the consequences of a foreign policy which
+ they could not direct. The hostility of the British Admiralty, on
+ strategic and political grounds, to the plan of local Dominion navies, had
+ prevented progress on the most feasible lines. The deadlock was a serious
+ one. Now the imminence of danger compelled a solution. Taking the lead in
+ this instance in the working out of the policy of colonial nationalism,
+ Australia had already insisted upon abandoning the barren and inadequate
+ policy of making a cash contribution for the support of a British squadron
+ in Australasian waters and had established a local navy, manned,
+ maintained, and controlled by the Commonwealth. Canada decided to follow
+ her example. In March, 1909, the Canadian House of Commons unanimously
+ adopted a resolution in favor of establishing a Canadian naval service to
+ cooperate in close relation with the British navy. During the summer a
+ special conference was held in London attended by ministers from all the
+ Dominions. At this conference the Admiralty abandoned its old position;
+ and it was agreed that Australia and Canada should establish local forces,
+ cruisers, destroyers, and submarines, with auxiliary ships and naval
+ bases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Canadian Parliament met in 1910, Sir Wilfrid Laurier submitted a
+ Naval Service Bill, providing for the establishment of local fleets, of
+ which the smaller vessels were to be built in Canada. The ships were to be
+ under the control of the Dominion Government, which might, in case of
+ emergency, place them at the disposal of the British Admiralty. The bill
+ was passed in March. In the autumn two cruisers, the Rainbow and the
+ Niobe, were bought from Britain to serve as training ships. In the
+ following spring a naval college was opened at Halifax, and tenders were
+ called for the construction, in Canada, of five cruisers and six
+ destroyers. In June, 1911, at the regular Imperial Conference of that
+ year, an agreement was reached regarding the boundaries of the Australian
+ and Canadian stations and uniformity of training and discipline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the reciprocity fight and the defeat of the Government. No
+ tenders had been finally accepted, and the new Administration of Premier
+ Borden was free to frame its own policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The naval issue had now become a party question. The policy of a Dominion
+ navy, a policy which was the logical extension of the principles of
+ colonial nationalism and imperial cooperation which had guided imperial
+ development for many years, was attacked by ultra-imperialists in the
+ English-speaking provinces as strategically unsound and as leading
+ inevitably to separation from the Empire. It was also attacked by the
+ Nationalists of Quebec, the ultra-colonialists or provincialists, as they
+ might more truly be termed, under the vigorous leadership of Henri
+ Bourassa, as yet another concession to imperialism and to militarism. In
+ November, 1910, by alarming the habitant by pictures of his sons being
+ dragged away by naval press gangs, the Nationalists succeeded in defeating
+ the Liberal candidate in a by-election in Drummond-Arthabaska, at one time
+ Laurier's own constituency. In the general election which followed in
+ 1911, the same issue cost the Liberals a score of seats in Quebec.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, therefore, the new Prime Minister, Sir Robert Borden, faced the
+ issue, he endeavored to frame a policy which would suit both wings of his
+ following. In 1912 he proposed as an emergency measure to appropriate a
+ sum sufficient to build three dreadnoughts for the British navy, subject
+ to recall if at any time the Canadian people decided to use them as the
+ nucleus of a Canadian fleet. At the same time he undertook to submit to
+ the electorate his permanent naval policy, as soon as it was determined.
+ What that permanent policy would be he was unwilling to say, but the Prime
+ Minister made clear his own leanings by insisting that it would take half
+ a century to form a Canadian navy, which at best would be a poor and weak
+ substitute for the organization the Empire already possessed. The
+ contribution to the British navy satisfied the ultra-imperialists, while
+ the promise of a referendum and the call for money alone, and not men,
+ appealed to the Nationalist wing. Under the impetuous control of its new
+ head, Winston Churchill, the British Admiralty showed that it had repented
+ its brief conversion to the Dominion navy policy, by preparing an
+ elaborate memorandum to support Borden's proposals, and also by
+ formulating plans for imperial flying squadrons to be supplied by the
+ Dominions, which made clear its wish to continue the centralizing policy
+ permanently. The Liberal Opposition vigorously denounced the whole
+ dreadnought programme, advocating instead two Canadian fleet units
+ somewhat larger than at first contemplated. Their obstruction was overcome
+ in the Commons by the introduction of the closure, but the Liberal
+ majority in the Senate, on the motion of Sir George Ross, a former Premier
+ of Ontario, threw out the bill by insisting that it should not be passed
+ before being "submitted to the judgment of the country." This challenge
+ the Government did not accept. Until the outbreak of the war no further
+ steps were taken either to arrange for contribution or to establish a
+ Canadian navy, though the naval college at Halifax was continued, and the
+ training cruisers were maintained in a half-hearted way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Imperial Conference of 1911, one more attempt was made to set up a
+ central governing authority in London. Sir Joseph Ward, of New Zealand,
+ acting as the mouthpiece of the imperial federationists, urged the
+ establishment, first of an Imperial Council of State and later of an
+ Imperial Parliament. His proposals met no support. "It is absolutely
+ impracticable," was Laurier's verdict. "Any scheme of representation&mdash;no
+ matter what you call it, parliament or council&mdash;of the overseas
+ Dominions, must give them so very small a representation that it would be
+ practically of no value," declared Premier Morris of Newfoundland. "It is
+ not a practical scheme," Premier Fisher of Australia agreed; "our present
+ system of responsible government has not broken down." "The creation of
+ some body with centralized authority over the whole Empire," Premier Botha
+ of South Africa cogently insisted, "would be a step entirely antagonistic
+ to the policy of Great Britain which has been so successful in the past
+ .... It is the policy of decentralization which has made the Empire&mdash;the
+ power granted to its various peoples to govern themselves." Even Premier
+ Asquith of the United Kingdom declared the proposals "fatal to the very
+ fundamental conditions on which our empire has been built up and carried
+ on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stronger than any logic was the presence of Louis Botha in the conferences
+ of 1907 and 1911. On the former occasion it was only five years since he
+ had been in arms against Great Britain. The courage and vision of Sir
+ Henry Campbell-Bannerman in granting full and immediate self-government to
+ the conquered Boer republics had been justified by the results. Once more
+ freedom proved the only enduring basis of empire. Botha's task in
+ attempting to make Boer and Briton work together, first in the Transvaal,
+ and, after 1910, in the Union of South Africa, had not been an easy one.
+ Attacked by extremists from both directions, he faced much the same
+ difficulties as Laurier, and he found in Laurier's friendship, counsel,
+ and example much that stood him in good stead in the days of stress to
+ come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not less important than the relations with the United Kingdom in this
+ period were the relations with the United States. The Venezuela episode
+ was the turning point in the relations between the United States and the
+ British Empire. Both in Washington and in London men had been astounded to
+ find themselves on the verge of war. The danger passed, but the shock
+ awoke thousands to a realization of all that the two peoples had in common
+ and to the need of concerted effort to remove the sources of friction.
+ Then hard on the heels of this episode followed the Spanish-American War.*
+ Not the least of its by-products was a remarkable improvement in the
+ relations of the English-speaking nations. The course of the war, the
+ intrigues of European courts to secure intervention on behalf of Spain,
+ and the lining up of a British squadron beside Dewey in Manila Bay when a
+ German Admiral blustered, revealed Great Britain as the one trustworthy
+ friend the United States possessed abroad. The annexation of the
+ Philippines and the definite entry of the United States upon world
+ politics broke down the irresponsible isolation which British ministers
+ had found so much of a barrier to diplomatic accommodations. With John Hay
+ and later Elihu Root at the State Department, and Lansdowne and Grey at
+ the Foreign Office in London, there began an era of good feeling between
+ the two countries.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See "The Path of Empire".
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ottawa and Washington were somewhat slower in coming to terms. Many
+ difficulties can arise along a three thousand mile border, and with a
+ people so sure of themselves as the Americans were at this period and a
+ people so sensitive to any infringements of their national rights as the
+ Canadians were, petty differences often loomed large. The Laurier
+ Government, therefore, proposed shortly after its accession to power in
+ 1896 that an attempt should be made to clear away all outstanding issues
+ and to effect a trade agreement. A Joint High Commission was constituted
+ in 1898. The members from the United States were Senator Fairbanks,
+ Senator Gray, Representative Nelson Dingley, General Foster, J.A. Kasson,
+ and T.J. Coolidge of the State Department. Great Britain was represented
+ by Lord Herschell, who acted as chairman, Newfoundland by Sir James
+ Winter, and Canada by Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Sir Richard Cartwright, Sir
+ Louis Davies, and John Charlton, M.P.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Commission held prolonged sittings, first at Quebec and later at
+ Washington, and reached tentative agreement on nearly all of the
+ troublesome questions at issue. The bonding privileges on both sides the
+ border were to be given an assured basis; the unneighborly alien labor
+ laws were to be relaxed; the Rush-Bagot Convention regarding armament on
+ the Great Lakes was to be revised; Canadian vessels were to abandon
+ pelagic sealing in Bering Sea for a money compensation; and a reciprocity
+ treaty covering natural products and some manufactures was sketched out.
+ Yet no agreement followed. One issue, the Alaska boundary, proved
+ insoluble, and as no agreement was acceptable which did not cover every
+ difference, the Commission never again assembled after its adjournment in
+ February, 1899.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boundary between Alaska and the Dominion was the only bit of the
+ border line not yet determined. As in former cases of boundary disputes,
+ the inaccuracies of map makers, the ambiguities of diplomats, the clash of
+ local interests, and stiff-necked national pride made a settlement
+ difficult. In 1825 Russia and Great Britain had signed a treaty which
+ granted Russia a long panhandle strip down the Pacific coast. With the
+ purchase of Alaska in 1867 the United States succeeded to Russia's claim.
+ With the growth of settlement in Canada this long barrier down half of her
+ Pacific coast was found to be irksome. Attempt after attempt to have the
+ line determined only added to the stock of memorials in official
+ pigeonholes. Then came the discovery of gold in the Klondike in 1896, and
+ the question of easy access by sea to the Canadian back country became an
+ urgent one. Canada offered to compromise, admitting the American title to
+ the chief ports on Lynn Canal, Dyea and Skagway, if Pyramid Harbor were
+ held Canadian. She urged arbitration on the model the United States had
+ dictated in the Venezuela dispute. But the United States was in possession
+ of the most important points. Its people believed the Canadian claims had
+ been trumped up when the Klondike fields were opened. The Puget Sound
+ cities wanted no breach in their monopoly of the supply trade to the
+ north. The only concession the United States would make was to refer the
+ dispute to a commission of six, three from each country, with the proviso
+ that no area settled by Americans should in any event pass into other
+ bands. Canada felt that arbitration under these conditions would either
+ end in deadlock, leaving the United States in possession, or in concession
+ by one or more of the British representatives, and so declined to accept
+ the proposed arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in 1903, agreement was reached between London and Washington to
+ accept the tribunal proposed by the United States, which in turn withdrew
+ its veto on the transfer of any settled area. Canada's reluctant consent
+ was won by a provision that the members of the tribunal should be
+ "impartial jurists of repute," sworn to render a judicial verdict. When
+ Elihu Root, Senator Lodge, and Senator Turner were named as the American
+ representatives, Ottawa protested that eminent and honorable as they were,
+ their public attitude on this question made it impossible to consider them
+ "impartial jurists." The Canadian Government in return nominated three
+ judges, Lord Alverstone, Lord Chief Justice of England, Sir Louis Jette,
+ of Quebec, and Mr. Justice Armour, succeeded on his death by A. B.
+ Aylesworth, a leader of the Ontario bar. The tribunal met in London, where
+ the case was thoroughly argued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Treaty of 1825 had provided that the southern boundary should follow
+ the Portland Canal to the fifty-sixth parallel of latitude and thence the
+ summits of the mountains parallel to the coast, with the stipulation that
+ if the summit of the mountains anywhere proved to be more than ten marine
+ leagues from the ocean, a line drawn parallel to the windings of the coast
+ not more than ten leagues distant should form the boundary. Three
+ questions arose: What was the Portland Canal? Did the treaty assure Russia
+ an unbroken strip by making the boundary run round the ends of deep
+ inlets? Did mountains exist parallel to the coast within ten leagues'
+ distance? In October these questions received their answer. Lord
+ Alverstone and the three American members decided in favor of the United
+ States on the main issues. The two Canadian, representatives refused to
+ sign the award and denounced it as unjudicial and unwarranted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The decision set Canada aflame. Lord Alverstone was denounced in
+ unmeasured terms. From Atlantic to Pacific the charge was echoed that once
+ more the interests of Canada had been sacrificed by Britain on the altar
+ of Anglo-American friendship. The outburst was not understood abroad. It
+ was not, as United States opinion imagined, merely childish petulance or
+ the whining of a poor loser. It was against Great Britain, not against the
+ United States, that the criticism was directed. It was not the decision,
+ but the way in which it was made, that roused deep anger. The decision on
+ the main issue, that the line ran back of even the deepest inlets and
+ barred Canada from a single harbor, though unwelcome, was accepted as a
+ judicial verdict and has since been little questioned. The finding that
+ the boundary should follow certain mountains behind those Canada urged,
+ but short of the ten league line, was attacked by the Canadian
+ representatives as a compromise, and its judicial character is certainly
+ open to some doubt. But it was on the third finding that the thunders
+ broke. The United States had contended that the Portland Channel of the
+ treaty makers ran south of four islands which lay east of Prince of Wales
+ Island, and Canada that it ran north of these islands. Lord Alverstone,
+ after joining in a judgment with the Canadian commissioners that it ran
+ north, suddenly, without any conference with them, and, as the wording of
+ the award showed, by agreement with the United States representatives,
+ announced that it ran where no one had ever suggested it could run, north
+ of two and south of two, thus dividing the land in dispute. The islands
+ were of little importance even strategically, but the incontrovertible
+ evidence that instead of a judicial finding a political compromise had
+ been effected was held of much importance. After a time the storm died
+ down, but it revealed one unmistakable fact: Canadian nationalism was
+ growing fully as fast as Canadian imperialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The relations between Canada and the United States now came to show the
+ effect of increasingly close business connections. The northward trek of
+ tens of thousands of American farmers was under way. United States
+ capitalists began to invest heavily in farm and timber lands. Factory
+ after factory opened a Canadian branch. Ten years later these investments
+ exceeded six hundred millions. In the West, James J. Hill was planning the
+ expansion of the Great Northern system throughout the prairie provinces
+ and was securing an interest in the great Crow's Nest Pass coal fields.
+ Tourist travel multiplied. The two peoples came to know each other better
+ than ever before, and with knowledge many prejudices and misunderstandings
+ vanished. Canada's growing prosperity did not merely bring greater
+ individual intercourse; it made the United States as a whole less
+ patronizing in its dealings with its neighbor and Canada less querulous
+ and thin-skinned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this more favorable temper many old issues were cleared off the slate.
+ The northeastern fisheries question, revived by a conflict between
+ Newfoundland and the United States as to treaty privileges, was referred
+ to the Hague Court in 1909. The verdict of the arbitrators recognized a
+ measure of right in the contentions of both sides. A detailed settlement
+ was prescribed which was accepted without demur in the United States,
+ Newfoundland, and Canada alike. Pelagic sealing in the North Pacific was
+ barred in 1911 by an international agreement between the United States,
+ Great Britain, Japan, and Russia. Less success attended the attempt to
+ arrange joint action to regulate and conserve the fisheries of the Great
+ Lakes and the salmon fisheries of the Pacific, for the treaty drawn up in
+ 1911 by the experts from both countries failed to pass the United States
+ Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most striking development of the decade was the businesslike and
+ neighborly solution found for the settlement of the boundary waters
+ controversy. The growing demands for the use of streams such as the
+ Niagara, the St. Lawrence, and the Sault for power purposes, and of
+ western border rivers for irrigation schemes, made it essential to take
+ joint action to reconcile not merely the conflicting claims from the
+ opposite sides of the border but the conflicting claims of power and
+ navigation and other interests in each country. In 1905 a temporary
+ waterways commission was appointed, and four years later the Boundary
+ Waters Treaty provided for the establishment of a permanent Joint High
+ Commission, consisting of three representatives from each country, and
+ with authority over all cases of use, obstruction, or diversion of border
+ waters. Individual citizens of either country were allowed to present
+ their case directly before the Commission, an innovation in international
+ practice. Still more significant of the new spirit was the inclusion in
+ this treaty of a clause providing for reference to the Commission, with
+ the consent of the United States Senate and the Dominion Cabinet, of any
+ matter whatever at issue between the two countries. With little discussion
+ and as a matter of course, the two democracies, in the closing years of a
+ full century of peace, thus made provision for the sane and friendly
+ settlement of future line-fence disputes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief barrier to good relations was the customs tariff. Protectionism,
+ and the attitude of which it was born and which it bred in turn, was still
+ firmly entrenched in both countries. Tariff bars, it is true, had not been
+ able to prevent the rapid growth of trade; imports from the United States
+ to Canada had grown especially fast and Canada now ranked third in the
+ list of the Republic's customers. Yet in many ways the tariff hindered
+ free intercourse. Though every dictate of self-interest and good sense
+ demanded a reduction of duties, Canada would not and did not take the
+ initiative. Time and again she had sought reciprocity, only to have her
+ proposals rejected, often with contemptuous indifference. When Sir Wilfrid
+ Laurier announced in 1900 that there would be no more pilgrimages to
+ Washington, he voiced the almost unanimous opinion of a people whose pride
+ had been hurt by repeated rebuffs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile protectionist sentiment had grown stronger in Canada. The
+ opening of the West had given an expanding market for eastern factories
+ and had seemingly justified the National Policy. The Liberals, the
+ traditional upholders of freer trade, after some initial redemptions of
+ their pledges, had compromised with the manufacturing interests. The
+ Conservatives, still more protectionist in temper, voiced in Parliament
+ little criticism of this policy, and the free trade elements among the
+ farmers were as yet unorganized and inarticulate. Signs of this
+ protectionist revival, which had in it, as in the seventies, an element of
+ nationalism, were many. A four-story tariff was erected. The lowest rates
+ were those granted the United Kingdom; then came the intermediate tariff,
+ for the products of countries giving Canada special terms; next the
+ general tariff; and, finally, the surtax for use against powers
+ discriminating in any special degree against the Dominion. The provinces
+ one by one forbade the export of pulp wood cut on Crown Lands, in order to
+ assure its manufacture into wood pulp or paper in Canada. The Dominion in
+ 1907 secured the abrogation of the postal convention made with the United
+ States in 1875 providing for the reciprocal free distribution of second
+ class mail matter originating in the other country. This step was taken at
+ the instance of Canadian manufacturers, alarmed at the effect of the
+ advertising pages of United States magazines in directing trade across the
+ line. Yet even with such developments, the Canadian tariff remained lower
+ than its neighbor's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the United States the tendency was in the other direction. With the
+ growth of cities, the interests of the consumers of foods outweighed the
+ influence of the producers. Manufacturers in many cases had reached the
+ export stage, where foreign markets, cheap food, and cheap raw materials
+ were more necessary than a protected home market. The "muckrakers" were at
+ the height of their activity; and the tariff, as one instrument of
+ corruption and privilege, was suffering with the popular condemnation of
+ all big interests. United States newspapers were eager for free wood pulp
+ and cheaper paper, just as Canadian newspapers defended the policy of
+ checking export. It was not surprising, therefore, that reciprocity with
+ Canada, as one means of increasing trade and reducing the tariff, took on
+ new popularity. New England was the chief seat of the movement, with Henry
+ M. Whitney and Eugene N. Foss as its most persistent advocates. Detroit,
+ Chicago, St. Paul, and other border cities were also active.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Official action soon followed this unofficial campaign. Curiously enough,
+ it came as an unexpected by-product of a further experiment in protection,
+ the Payne-Aldrich tariff. For the first time in the experience of the
+ United States this tariff incorporated the principle of minimum and
+ maximum schedules. The maximum rates, fixed at twenty-five per cent ad
+ valorem above the normal or minimum rates, were to be enforced upon the
+ goods of any country which had not, before March 10, 1910, satisfied the
+ President that it did not discriminate against the products of the United
+ States. One by one the various nations demonstrated this to President
+ Taft's satisfaction or with wry faces made the readjustments necessary. At
+ last Canada alone remained. The United States conceded that the preference
+ to the United Kingdom did not constitute discrimination, but it insisted
+ that it should enjoy the special rates recently extended to France by
+ treaty. In Canada this demand was received with indignation. Its tariff
+ rates were much lower than those which the United States imposed, and its
+ purchases in that country were twice as great as its sales. The demand was
+ based on a sudden and complete reversal of the traditional American
+ interpretation of the most favored nation policy. The President admitted
+ the force of Canada's contentions, but the law left him no option.
+ Fortunately it did leave him free to decide as to the adequacy of any
+ concessions, and thus agreement was made possible at the eleventh hour. At
+ the President's suggestion a conference at Albany was arranged, and on the
+ 30th of March a bargain was struck. Canada conceded to the United States
+ its intermediate tariff rates on thirteen minor schedules&mdash;chinaware,
+ nuts, prunes, and whatnot. These were accepted as equivalent to the
+ special terms given France, and Canada was certified as being entitled to
+ minimum rates. The United States had saved its face. Then to complete the
+ comedy, Canada immediately granted the same concessions to all other
+ countries, that is, made the new rates part of the general tariff. The
+ United States ended where it began, in receipt of no special concessions.
+ The motions required had been gone through; phantom reductions had been
+ made to meet a phantom discrimination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was only the beginning of attempts at accommodation. The threat of
+ tariff war had called forth in the United States loud protests against any
+ such reversion to economic barbarism. President Taft realized that he had
+ antagonized the growing low-tariff sentiment of the country by his support
+ of the Payne-Aldrich tariff and was eager to set himself right. A week
+ before the March negotiations were concluded, a Democratic candidate had
+ carried a strongly Republican congressional district in Massachusetts on a
+ platform of reciprocity with Canada. The President, therefore, proposed a
+ bold stroke. He made a sweeping offer of better trade relations.
+ Negotiations were begun at Ottawa and concluded in Washington. In January,
+ 1911, announcement was made that a broad agreement had been effected.
+ Grain, fruit, and vegetables, dairy and most farm products, fish, hewn
+ timber and sawn lumber, and several minerals were put on the free list. A
+ few manufactures were also made free, and the duties on meats, flour,
+ coal, agricultural implements, and other products were substantially
+ reduced. The compact was to be carried out, not by treaty, but by
+ concurrent legislation. Canada was to extend the same terms to the most
+ favored nations by treaty, and to all parts of the British Empire by
+ policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For fifty years the administrations of the two countries had never been so
+ nearly at one. More difficulty was met with in the legislatures. In
+ Congress, farmers and fishermen, standpat Republicans and Progressives
+ hostile to the Administration, waged war against the bargain. It was only
+ in a special session, and with the aid of Democratic votes and a
+ Washington July sun, that the opposition was overcome. In the Canadian
+ Parliament, after some initial hesitation, the Conservatives attacked the
+ proposal. The Government had a safe majority, but the Opposition resorted
+ to obstruction; and late in July, Parliament was suddenly dissolved and
+ the Government appealed to the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the bargain was first concluded, the Canadian Government had imagined
+ it would meet little opposition, for it was precisely the type of
+ agreement that Government after Government, Conservative as well as
+ Liberal, had sought in vain for over forty years. For a day or two that
+ expectation was justified. Then the forces of opposition rallied, timid
+ questioning gave way to violent denunciation, and at last agreement and
+ Government alike were swept away in a flood of popular antagonism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One reason for this result was that the verdict was given in a general
+ election, not in a referendum. The fate of the Government was involved;
+ its general record was brought up for review; party ambitions and passions
+ were stirred to the utmost. Fifteen years, of office-holding had meant the
+ accumulation of many scandals, a slackening in administrative efficiency,
+ and the cooling by official compromise of the ardent faith of the
+ Liberalism of the earlier day. The Government had failed to bring in
+ enough new blood. The Opposition fought with the desperation of fifteen
+ years of fasting and was better served by its press.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the side issues introduced into the campaign, the most important were
+ the naval policy in Quebec and the racial and religious issue in the
+ English-speaking provinces. The Government had to face what Sir Wilfrid
+ Laurier termed "the unholy alliance" of Roman Catholic Nationalists under
+ Bourassa in Quebec and Protestant Imperialists in Ontario. In the
+ French-speaking districts the Government was denounced for allowing Canada
+ to be drawn into the vortex of militarism and imperialism and for
+ sacrificing the interests of Roman Catholic schools in the West. On every
+ hand the naval policy was attacked as inevitably bringing in its train
+ conscription to fight European wars a contention hotly denied by the
+ Liberals. The Conservative campaign managers made a working arrangement
+ with the Nationalists as to candidates and helped liberally in circulating
+ Bourassa's newspaper, Le Devoir. On the back "concessions" of Ontario a
+ quieter but no less effective campaign was carried on against the
+ domination of Canadian politics by a French Roman Catholic province and a
+ French Roman Catholic Prime Minister. In vain the Liberals appealed to
+ national unity or started back fires in Ontario by insisting that a vote
+ for Borden meant a vote for Bourassa. The Conservative-Nationalist
+ alliance cost the Government many seats in Quebec and apparently did not
+ frighten Ontario.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reciprocity, however, was the principal issue everywhere except in Quebec.
+ Powerful forces were arrayed against it. Few manufactures had been put on
+ the free list, but the argument that the reciprocity agreement was the
+ thin edge of the wedge rallied the organized manufacturers in almost
+ unbroken hostile array. The railways, fearful that western traffic would
+ be diverted to United States roads, opposed the agreement vigorously under
+ the leadership of the ex-American chairman of the board of directors of
+ the Canadian Pacific, Sir William Van Horne, who made on this occasion one
+ of his few public entries into politics. The banks, closely involved in
+ the manufacturing and railway interests, threw their weight in the same
+ direction. They were aided by the prevalence of protectionist sentiment in
+ the eastern cities and industrial towns, which were at the same stage of
+ development and in the same mood as the cities of the United States some
+ decades earlier. The Liberal fifteen-year compromise with protection made
+ it difficult in a seven weeks' campaign to revive a desire for freer
+ trade. The prosperity of the country and the cry, "Let well enough alone,"
+ told powerfully against the bargain. Yet merely from the point of view of
+ economic advantage, the popular verdict would probably have been in its
+ favor. The United States market no longer loomed so large as it had in the
+ eighties, but its value was undeniable. Farmer, fisherman, and miner stood
+ to gain substantially by the lowering of the bars into the richest market
+ in the world. Every farm paper in Canada and all the important farm
+ organizations supported reciprocity. Its opponents, therefore, did not
+ trust to a direct frontal attack. Their strategy was to divert attention
+ from the economic advantages by raising the cry of political danger. The
+ red herring of annexation was drawn across the trail, and many a farmer
+ followed it to the polling booth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the outset, then, the opponents of reciprocity concentrated their
+ attacks on its political perils. They denounced the reciprocity agreement
+ as the forerunner of annexation, the deathblow to Canadian nationality and
+ British connection. They prophesied that the trade and intercourse built
+ up between the East and the West of Canada by years of sacrifice and
+ striving would shrivel away, and that each section of the Dominion would
+ become a mere appendage to the adjacent section of the United States.
+ Where the treasure was, there would the heart be also. After some years of
+ reciprocity, the channels of Canadian trade would be so changed that a
+ sudden return to high protection on the part of the United States would
+ disrupt industry and a mere threat of such a change would lead to a
+ movement for complete union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This prophecy was strengthened by apposite quotations showing the existing
+ drift of opinion in the United States. President Taft's reference to the
+ "light and imperceptible bond uniting the Dominion with the mother
+ country" and his "parting of the ways" speech received sinister
+ interpretations. Speaker Champ Clark's announcement that he was in favor
+ of the agreement because he hoped "to see the day when the American flag
+ will float over every square foot of the British North American
+ possessions" was worth tens of thousands of votes. The anti-reciprocity
+ press of Canada seized upon these utterances, magnified them, and
+ sometimes, it was charged, inspired or invented them. Every American
+ crossroads politician who found a useful peroration in a vision of the
+ Stars and Stripes floating from Panama to the North Pole was represented
+ as a statesman of national power voicing a universal sentiment. The action
+ of the Hearst papers in sending pro-reciprocity editions into the border
+ cities of Canada made many votes&mdash;but not for reciprocity. The
+ Canadian public proved that it was unable to suffer fools gladly. It was
+ vain to argue that all men of weight in the United States had come to
+ understand and to respect Canada's independent ambitions; that in any
+ event it was not what the United States thought but what Canada thought
+ that mattered; or that the Canadian farmer who sold a bushel of good wheat
+ to a United States miller no more sold his loyalty with it than a Kipling
+ selling a volume of verse or a Canadian financier selling a block of stock
+ in the same market. The flag was waved, and the Canadian voter, mindful of
+ former American slights and backed by newly arrived Englishmen admirably
+ organized by the anti-reciprocity forces, turned against any "entangling
+ alliance." The prosperity of the country made it safe to express
+ resentment of the slights of half a century or fear of this too sudden
+ friendliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of the elections, which were held on September 21, 1911, was
+ the crushing defeat of the Liberal party. A Liberal majority of forty-four
+ in a house of two hundred and twenty-one members was turned into a
+ Conservative majority of forty-nine. Eight cabinet ministers went down to
+ defeat. The Government had a slight majority in the Maritime Provinces and
+ Quebec, and a large majority in the prairie West, but the overwhelming
+ victory of the Opposition in Ontario, Manitoba, and British Columbia
+ turned the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The appeal to loyalty revealed much that was worthy and much that was
+ sordid in Canadian life. It was well that a sturdy national self-reliance
+ should be developed and expressed in the face of American prophets of
+ "manifest destiny," and that men should be ready to set ideals above
+ pocket. It was unfortunate that in order to demonstrate a loyalty which
+ might have been taken for granted economic advantage was sacrificed; and
+ it was disturbing to note the ease with which big interests with unlimited
+ funds for organizing, advertising, and newspaper campaigning, could
+ pervert national sentiment to serve their own ends. Yet this was possibly
+ a stage through which Canada, like every young nation, had to pass; and
+ the gentle art of twisting the lion's tail had proved a model for the
+ practice of plucking the eagle's feathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The growth of Canada brought her into closer touch with lands across the
+ sea. Men, money, and merchandise came from East and West; and with their
+ coming new problems faced the Government of the Dominion. With Europe they
+ were trade questions to solve, and with Asia the more delicate issues
+ arising out of oriental immigration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1907 the Canadian Government had established an intermediate tariff,
+ with rates halfway between the general and the British preferential
+ tariffs, for the express purpose of bargaining with other powers. In that
+ year an agreement based substantially on these intermediate rates was
+ negotiated with France, though protectionist opposition in the French
+ Senate prevented ratification until 1910. Similar reciprocal arrangements
+ were concluded in 1910 with Belgium, the Netherlands, and Italy. The
+ manner of the negotiation was as significant as the matter. In the case of
+ France the treaty was negotiated in Paris by two Canadian ministers, W.S.
+ Fielding and L.P. Brodeur, appointed plenipotentiaries of His Majesty for
+ that purpose, with the British Ambassador associated in what Mr. Arthur
+ Balfour termed a "purely technical" capacity. In the case of the other
+ countries even this formal recognition of the old colonial status was
+ abandoned. The agreement with Italy was negotiated in Canada between "the
+ Royal Consul of Italy for Canada, representing the government of the
+ Kingdom of Italy, and the Minister of Finance of Canada, representing His
+ Excellency the Governor General acting in conjunction with the King's
+ Privy Council for Canada." The conclusions in these later instances were
+ embodied in conventions, rather than formal treaties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With one country, however, tariff war reigned instead of treaty peace. In
+ 1899 Germany subjected Canadian exports to her general or maximum tariff,
+ because the Dominion refused to grant her the preferential rates reserved
+ for members of the British Empire group of countries. After four years'
+ deliberation Canada eventually retaliated by imposing on German goods a
+ special surtax of thirty-three and one-third per cent. The trade of both
+ countries suffered, but Germany's, being more specialized, much the more
+ severely. After seven years' strife, Germany took the initiative in
+ proposing a truce. In 1910 Canada agreed to admit German goods at the
+ rates of the general&mdash;not the intermediate&mdash;tariff, while
+ Germany in return waived her protest against the British preference and
+ granted minimum rates on the most important Canadian exports.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oriental immigration had been an issue in Canada ever since Chinese
+ navvies had been imported in the early eighties to work on the government
+ sections of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Mine owners, fruit farmers, and
+ contractors were anxious that the supply should continue unchecked; but,
+ as in the United States, the economic objections of the labor unions and
+ the political objections of the advocates of a "White Canada" carried the
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinese immigration had been restricted in 1885 by a head tax of $50 on
+ all immigrants save officials, merchants, or scholars; in 1901 this tax
+ was doubled; and in 1904 it was raised to $500. In each case the tax
+ proved a barrier only for a year or two, when wages would rise
+ sufficiently to warrant Orientals paying the higher toll to enter the
+ Promised Land. Japanese immigrants did not come in large numbers until
+ 1906, when the activities of employment companies brought seven thousand
+ Japanese by way of Hawaii. Agitators from the Pacific States fanned the
+ flames of opposition in British Columbia, and anti-Chinese and
+ anti-Japanese riots broke out in Vancouver in 1907. The Dominion
+ Government then grappled with the question. Japan's national sensitiveness
+ and her position as an ally of Great Britain called for diplomatic
+ handling. A member of the Dominion Cabinet, Rodolphe Lemieux, succeeded in
+ 1907 in negotiating at Tokio an agreement by which Japan herself undertook
+ to restrict the number of passports issued annually to emigrants to
+ Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hindu migration, which began in 1907, gave rise to a still more
+ delicate situation. What did the British Empire mean, many a Hindu asked,
+ if British subjects were to be barred from British lands? The only reply
+ was that the British Government which still ruled India no longer ruled
+ the Dominions, and that it was on the Dominions that the responsibility
+ for the exclusion policy must rest. In 1909 Canada suggested that the
+ Indian Government itself should limit emigration, but this policy did not
+ meet with approval at the time. Failing in this measure, the Laurier
+ Government fell back on a general clause in the Immigration Act
+ prohibiting the entrance of immigrants except by direct passage from the
+ country of origin and on a continuous ticket, a rule which effectually
+ barred the Hindu because of the lack of any direct steamship line between
+ India and Canada. An Order-in-Council further required that immigrants
+ from all Asiatic countries must possess at least $200 on entering Canada.
+ The Borden Government supplemented these restrictions by a special
+ Order-in-Council in 1913 prohibiting the landing of artisans or unskilled
+ laborers of any race at ports in British Columbia, ostensibly because of
+ depression in the labor market. The leaders of the Hindu movement, with
+ apparently some German assistance, determined to test these restrictions.
+ In May, 1914, there arrived at Vancouver from Shanghai a Japanese ship
+ carrying four hundred Sikhs from India. A few were admitted, as having
+ been previously domiciled in Canada; the others, after careful inquiry,
+ were refused admittance and ordered to be deported. Local police were
+ driven away from the ship when attempting to enforce the order, and the
+ Government ordered H.M.C.S. Rainbow to intervene. By a curious irony of
+ history, the first occasion on which this first Canadian warship was
+ called on to display force was in expelling from Canada the subjects of
+ another part of the British Empire. Further trouble followed when the
+ Sikhs reached Calcutta in September, 1914, for riots took place involving
+ serious loss of life and later an abortive attempt at rebellion.
+ Fortunately there were good prospects that the Indian Government would in
+ future accept the proposal made by Canada in 1909. At the Imperial
+ Conference of 1917, where representatives of India were present for the
+ first time, it was agreed to recommend the principle of reciprocity in the
+ treatment of immigrants, India thus being free to save her pride by
+ imposing on men from the Dominions the same restrictions the Dominions
+ imposed on immigrants from India.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all these dealings with lands across the sea paled into insignificance
+ beside the task imposed on Canada by the Great War. In the sudden crisis
+ the Dominion attained a place among the nations which the slower changes
+ of peace time could scarcely have made possible in decades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the war party in Germany and Austria-Hungary plunged Europe into the
+ struggle the world had long been fearing, there was not a moment's
+ hesitation on the part of the people of Canada. It was not merely the
+ circumstance that technically Canada was at war when Britain was at war
+ that led Canadians to instant action. The degree of participation, if not
+ the fact of war, was wholly a matter for the separate Dominions. It was
+ the deep and abiding sympathy with the mother country whose very existence
+ was to be at stake. Later, with the unfolding of Germany's full designs of
+ world dominance and the repeated display of her callous and ruthless
+ policies, Canada comprehended the magnitude of the danger threatening all
+ the world and grimly set herself to help end the menace of militarism once
+ for all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On August 1, 1914, two days before Belgium was invaded, and three days
+ before war between Britain and Germany had been declared, the Dominion
+ Government cabled to London their firm assurance that the people of Canada
+ would make every sacrifice necessary to secure the integrity and honor of
+ the Empire and asked for suggestions as to the form aid should take. The
+ financial and administrative measures the emergency demanded were carried
+ out by Orders-in-Council in accordance with the scheme of defense which
+ only a few months before had been drawn up in a "War Book". Two weeks
+ later, Parliament met in a special four day session and without a
+ dissenting voice voted the war credits the Government asked and conferred
+ upon it special war powers of the widest scope. The country then set about
+ providing men, money, and munitions of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day after war was declared, recruiting was begun for an expeditionary
+ force of 21,000 men. Half as many more poured into the camp at Valcartier
+ near Quebec; and by the middle of October this first Canadian contingent,
+ over 30,000 strong, the largest body of troops which had ever crossed the
+ Atlantic, was already in England, where its training was to be completed.
+ As the war went on and all previous forecasts of its duration and its
+ scale were far outrun, these numbers were multiplied many times. By the
+ summer of 1917 over 400,000 men had been enrolled for service, and over
+ 340,000 had already gone overseas, aside from over 25,000 Allied
+ reservists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally enough it was the young men of British birth who first responded
+ in large numbers to the recruiting officer's appeal. A military
+ background, vivid home memories, the enlistment of kinsmen or friends
+ overseas, the frequent slightness of local ties, sent them forth in
+ splendid and steady array. Then the call came home to the native-born, and
+ particularly to Canadians of English speech. Few of them had dreamed of
+ war, few had been trained even in militia musters; but in tens of
+ thousands they volunteered. From French-speaking Canada the response was
+ slower, in spite of the endeavors of the leaders of the Opposition as well
+ as of the Government to encourage enlistment. In some measure this was
+ only to be expected. Quebec was dominantly rural; its men married young,
+ and the country parishes had little touch with the outside world. Its
+ people had no racial sympathy with Britain and their connection with
+ France had long been cut by the cessation of immigration from that
+ country. Yet this is not the complete explanation of that aloofness which
+ marked a great part of Quebec. Account must be taken also of the
+ resentment caused by exaggerated versions of the treatment accorded the
+ French-Canadian minority in the schools of Ontario and the West, and
+ especially of the teaching of the Nationalists, led by Henri Bourassa, who
+ opposed active Canadian participation in the war. Lack of tact on the part
+ of the Government and reckless taunts from extremists in Ontario made the
+ breach steadily wider. Yet there were many encouraging considerations.
+ Another grandson of the leader of '37, Talbot Papineau, fell fighting
+ bravely, and it was a French-Canadian battalion, Les Vingt Deuxiemes,
+ which won the honors at Courcelette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the war first broke out, no one thought of any but voluntary methods
+ of enlistment. As the magnitude of the task came home to men and the
+ example of Great Britain had its influence, voices began to be raised in
+ favor of compulsion. Sir Robert Borden, the Premier, and Sir Wilfrid
+ Laurier alike opposed the suggestion. Early in 1917 the adoption of
+ conscription in the United States, and the need of reenforcements for the
+ Canadian forces at the front led the Prime Minister, immediately after his
+ return from the Imperial Conference in London, to bring down a measure for
+ compulsory service. He urged in behalf of this course that the need for
+ men was urgent beyond all question; that the voluntary system, wasteful
+ and unfair at best, had ceased to bring more than six or seven thousand
+ men a month, chiefly for other than infantry ranks; and that only by
+ compulsion could Quebec be brought to shoulder her fair share and the
+ slackers in all the provinces be made to rise to the need. It was
+ contended, on the other hand, that great as was the need for men, the need
+ for food, which Canada could best of all countries supply, was greater
+ still; that voluntary recruiting had yielded over four hundred thousand
+ men, proportionately equivalent to six million from the United States, and
+ was slackening only because the reservoir was nearly drained dry; and that
+ Quebec could be brought into line more effectively by conciliation than by
+ compulsion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The issue of conscription brought to an end the political truce which had
+ been declared in August, 1914. The keener partisans on both sides had not
+ long been able to abide on the heights of non-political patriotism which
+ they had occupied in the first generous weeks of the war. But the public
+ was weary of party cries and called for unity. Suggestions of a coalition
+ were made at different times, but the party in power, new to the sweets of
+ office, confident of its capacity, and backed by a strong majority, gave
+ little heed to the demand. Now, however, the strong popular opposition
+ offered to the announcement of conscription led the Prime Minister to
+ propose to Sir Wilfrid Laurier a coalition Government on a conscription
+ basis. Sir Wilfrid, while continuing to express his desire to cooperate in
+ any way that would advance the common cause, declined to enter a coalition
+ to carry out a programme decided upon without consultation and likely, in
+ his view, to wreck national unity without securing any compensating
+ increase in numbers beyond what a vigorous and sympathetic voluntary
+ campaign could yet obtain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For months negotiations continued within Parliament and without. The
+ Military Service Act was passed in August, 1917, with the support of the
+ majority of the English-speaking members of the Opposition. Then the
+ Government, which had already secured the passage of an Act providing for
+ taking the votes of the soldiers overseas, forced through under closure a
+ measure depriving of the franchise all aliens of enemy birth or speech who
+ had been admitted to citizenship since 1902, and giving a vote to every
+ adult woman relative of a soldier on active service. Victory for the
+ Government now appeared certain. Leading English-peaking Liberals,
+ particularly from the West, convinced that conscription was necessary to
+ keep Canada's forces up to the need, or that the War Times Election Act
+ made opposition hopeless, decided to accept Sir Robert Borden's offer of
+ seats in a coalition Cabinet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the election of December, 1917, in which passion and prejudice were
+ stirred as never before in the history of Canada, the Unionist forces won
+ by a sweeping majority. Ontario and the West were almost solidly behind
+ the Government in the number of members elected, Quebec as solidly against
+ it, and the Maritime Provinces nearly evenly divided. The soldiers' vote,
+ contrary to Australian experience, was overwhelmingly for conscription.
+ The Laurier Liberals polled more civilian votes in Ontario, Quebec,
+ Alberta, and British Columbia, and in the Dominion as a whole, than the
+ united Liberal party had received in the Reciprocity election of 1911. The
+ increase in the Unionist popular vote was still greater, however, and gave
+ the Government fifty-eight per cent of the popular vote and sixty-five per
+ cent of the seats in the House. Confidence in the administrative capacity
+ of the new Government, the belief that it would be more vigorous in
+ carrying on the war, the desire to make Quebec do its share, the influence
+ of the leaders of the Western Liberals and of the Grain Growers'
+ Associations, wholesale promises of exemption to farmers, and the working
+ of the new franchise law all had their part in the result. Eight months
+ after the Military Service Act was passed, it had added only twenty
+ thousand men to the nearly five hundred thousand volunteers; but steps
+ were then taken to cancel exemptions and to simplify the machinery of
+ administration. Some eighty thousand men were raised under conscription,
+ but the war, so far as Canada was concerned, was fought and won by
+ volunteers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The self-governing British colonies," wrote Bernhardi before the war,
+ "have at their disposal a militia, which is sometimes only in process of
+ formation. They can be completely ignored so far as concerns any European
+ theater of war." This contemptuous forecast might have been justified had
+ German expectations of a short war been fulfilled. Though large and
+ increasing sums had in recent years been spent on the Canadian militia and
+ on a small permanent force, the work of building up an army on the scale
+ the war demanded had virtually to be begun from the foundation. It was
+ pushed ahead with vigor, under the direction, for the first three years,
+ of the Minister of Militia, General Sir Sam Hughes. Many mistakes were
+ made. Complaints of waste in supply departments and of slackness of
+ discipline among the troops were rife in the early months. But the work
+ went on; and when the testing time came, Canada's civilian soldiers held
+ their own with any veterans on either side the long line of trenches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in April, 1915, at the second battle of Ypres&mdash;or, as it is
+ more often termed in Canada, St. Julien or Langemarck&mdash;that the
+ quality of the men of the first contingent was blazoned forth. The Germans
+ had launched a determined attack on the junction of the French and
+ Canadian forces, seeking to drive through to Calais. The use, for the
+ first time, of asphyxiating gases drove back in confusion the French
+ colonial troops on the left of the Canadians. Attacked and outflanked by a
+ German army of 150,000 men, four Canadian brigades, immensely inferior in
+ heavy artillery and tortured by the poisonous fumes, filled the gap,
+ hanging on doggedly day and night until reenforcements came and Calais was
+ saved. In sober retrospection it was almost incredible that the thin khaki
+ line had held against the overwhelming odds which faced it. A few weeks
+ later, at Givenchy and Festubert, in the same bloody salient of Ypres, the
+ Canadian division displayed equal courage with hardly equal success. In
+ the spring of 1916, when the Canadian forces grew first to three and then
+ to four divisions, heavy toll was taken at St. Eloi and Sanctuary Wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were shifted from the Ypres sector to the Somme, the dashing
+ success at Courcelette showed them as efficient in offense as in defense.
+ In 1917 a Canadian general, Sir Arthur Currie, three years before only a
+ business man of Vancouver, took command of the Canadian troops. The
+ capture of Vimy Ridge, key to the whole Arras position, after months of
+ careful preparation, the hard-fought struggle for Lens, and toward the
+ close of the year the winning of the Passchendaele Ridge, at heavy cost,
+ were instances of the increasing scale and importance of the operations
+ entrusted to Currie's men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the closing year of the war the Canadian corps played a still more
+ distinctive and essential part. During the early months of 1918, when the
+ Germans were making their desperate thrusts for Paris and the Channel, the
+ Canadians held little of the line that was attacked. Their divisions had
+ been withdrawn in turn for special training in open warfare movements, in
+ close cooperation with tanks and air forces. When the time came to launch
+ the Allied offensive, they were ready. It was Canadian troops who broke
+ the hitherto unbreakable Wotan line, or Drocourt-Queant switch; it was
+ Canadians who served as the spearhead in the decisive thrust against
+ Cambrai; and it was Canadians who captured Mons, the last German
+ stronghold taken before the armistice was signed, and thus ended the war
+ at the very spot where the British "Old Contemptibles" had begun their
+ dogged fight four years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through all the years of war the Canadian forces never lost a gun nor
+ retired from a position they had consolidated. Canadians were the first to
+ practice trench raiding; and Canadian cadets thronged that branch of the
+ service, the Royal Flying Corps, where steady nerves and individual
+ initiative were at a premium. In countless actions they proved their
+ fitness to stand shoulder to shoulder with the best that Britain and
+ France and the United States could send: they asked no more than that. The
+ casualty list of 220,000 men, of whom 60,000 sleep forever in the fields
+ of France and Flanders and in the plains of England, witnesses the price
+ this people of eight millions paid as its share in the task of freeing the
+ world from tyranny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The realization that in a world war not merely the men in the trenches but
+ the whole nation could and must be counted as part of the fighting force
+ was slow in coming in Canada as in other democratic and unwarlike lands.
+ Slowly the industry of the country was adjusted to a war basis. When the
+ conflict broke out, the country was pulling itself together after the
+ sudden collapse of the speculative boom of the preceding decade. For a
+ time men were content to hold their organization together and to avert the
+ slackening of trade and the spread of unemployment which they feared.
+ Then, as the industrial needs and opportunities of the war became clear,
+ they rallied. Field and factory vied in expansion, and the Canadian
+ contribution of food and munitions provided a very substantial share of
+ the Allies' needs. Exports increased threefold, and the total trade was
+ more than doubled as compared with the largest year before the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The financing of the war and of the industrial expansion which accompanied
+ it was a heavy task. For years Canada had looked to Great Britain for a
+ large share alike of public and of private borrowings. Now it became
+ necessary not merely to find at home all the capital required for ordinary
+ development but to meet the burden of war expenditure, and later to
+ advance to Great Britain the funds she required for her purchase of
+ supplies in Canada. The task was made easier by the effective working of a
+ banking system which had many times proved its soundness and its
+ flexibility. When the money market of Britain was no longer open to
+ overseas borrowers, the Dominion first turned to the United States, where
+ several federal and provincial loans were floated, and later to her own
+ resources. Domestic loans were issued on an increasing scale and with
+ increasing success, and the Victory Loan of 1918 enrolled one out of every
+ eight Canadians among its subscribers. Taxation reached an adequate basis
+ more slowly. Inertia and the influence of business interests led the
+ Government to cling for the first two years to customs and excise duties
+ as its main reliance. Then excess profits and income taxes of steadily
+ increasing weight were imposed, and the burdens were distributed more
+ fairly. The Dominion was able not only to meet the whole expenditure of
+ its armed forces but to reverse the relations which existed before the war
+ and to become, as far as current liabilities went, a creditor rather than
+ a debtor of the United Kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not merely the financial relations of Canada with the United
+ Kingdom which required readjustment. The service and the sacrifices which
+ the Dominions had made in the common cause rendered it imperative that the
+ political relations between the different parts of the Empire should be
+ put on a more definite and equal basis. The feeling was widespread that
+ the last remnants of the old colonial subordination must be removed and
+ that the control exercised by the Dominions should be extended over the
+ whole field of foreign affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Imperial Conference met in London in the spring of 1917. At special
+ War Cabinet meetings the representatives of the Dominions discussed war
+ plans and peace terms with the leaders of Britain. It was decided to hold
+ a Conference immediately after the end of the war to discuss the future
+ constitutional organization of the Empire. Premier Borden and General
+ Smuts both came out strongly against the projects of imperial
+ parliamentary federation which aggressive organizations in Britain and in
+ some of the Dominions had been urging. The Conference of 1917 recorded its
+ view that any coming readjustment must be based on a full recognition of
+ the Dominions as autonomous nations of an imperial commonwealth; that it
+ should recognize the right of the Dominions and of India to an adequate
+ voice in foreign policy; and that it should provide effective arrangements
+ for continuous consultation in all important matters of common concern and
+ for such concerted action as the several Governments should determine. The
+ policy of alliance, of cooperation between the Governments of the equal
+ and independent states of the Empire, searchingly tested and amply
+ justified by the war, had compelled assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coming of peace gave occasion for a wider and more formal recognition
+ of the new international status of the Dominions. It had first been
+ proposed that the British Empire should appear as a unit, with the
+ representatives of the Dominions present merely in an advisory capacity or
+ participating in turn as members of the British delegation. The Dominion
+ statesmen assembled in London and Paris declined to assent to this
+ proposal, and insisted upon representation in the Peace Conference and in
+ the League of Nations in their own right. The British Government, after
+ some debate, acceded, and, with more difficulty, the consent of the
+ leading Allies was won. The representatives of the Dominions signed the
+ treaty with Germany on behalf of their respective countries, and each
+ Dominion, with India, was made a member of the League. At the same time
+ only the British Empire, and not any of the Dominions, was given a place
+ in the real organ of power, the Executive Council of the League, and in
+ many respects the exact relationship between the United Kingdom and the
+ other parts of the Empire in international affairs was left ambiguous, for
+ later events and counsel to determine. Many French and American observers
+ who had not kept in close touch with the growth of national consciousness
+ within the British Empire were apprehensive lest this plan should prove a
+ deep-laid scheme for multiplying British influence in the Conference and
+ the League. Some misunderstanding was natural in view not only of the
+ unprecedented character of the Empire's development and polity, but of the
+ incomplete and ambiguous nature of the compromise affected at Paris
+ between the nationalist and the imperialist tendencies within the Empire.
+ Yet the reluctance of the British imperialists of the straiter sect to
+ accede to the new arrangement, and the independence of action of the
+ Dominion representatives at the Conference, as in the stand of Premier
+ Hughes of Australia on the Japanese demand for recognition of racial
+ equality and in the statement of protest by General Smuts of South Africa
+ on signing the treaty, made it clear that the Dominions would not be
+ merely echoes. Borden and Botha and Smuts, though new to the ways of
+ diplomacy, proved that in clear understanding of the broader issues and in
+ moderation of policy and temper they could bear comparison with any of the
+ leaders of the older nations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war also brought changes in the relations between Canada and her great
+ neighbor. For a time there was danger that it would erect a barrier of
+ differing ideals and contrary experience. When month after month went by
+ with the United States still clinging to its policy of neutrality, while
+ long lists of wounded and dead and missing were filling Canadian
+ newspapers, a quiet but deep resentment, not without a touch of conscious
+ superiority, developed in many quarters in the Dominion. Yet there were
+ others who realized how difficult and how necessary it was for the United
+ States to attain complete unity of purpose before entering the war, and
+ how different its position was from that of Canada, where the political
+ tie with Britain had brought immediate action more instinctive than
+ reasoned. It was remembered, too, that in the first 360,000 Canadians who
+ went overseas, there were 12,000 men of American birth, including both
+ residents in Canada and men who had crossed the border to enlist. When the
+ patience of the United States was at last exhausted and it took its place
+ in the ranks of the nations fighting for freedom, the joy of Canadians was
+ unbounded. The entrance of the United States into the war assured not only
+ the triumph of democracy in Europe but the continuance and extension of
+ frank and friendly relations between the democracies of North America. As
+ the war went on and Canada and the United States were led more and more to
+ pool their united resources, to cooperate in finance and in the supply of
+ coal, iron, steel, wheat, and other war essentials, countless new strands
+ were woven into the bond that held the two countries together. Nor was it
+ material unity alone that was attained; in the utterances of the head of
+ the Republic the highest aspirations of Canadians for the future ordering
+ of the world found incomparable expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Canada had done what she could to assure the triumph of right in the war.
+ Not less did she believe that she had a contribution to make toward that
+ new ordering of the world after the war which alone could compensate her
+ for the blood and treasure she had spent. It would be her mission to bind
+ together in friendship and common aspirations the two larger
+ English-speaking states, with one of which she was linked by history and
+ with the other by geography. To the world in general Canada had to offer
+ that achievement of difference in unity, that reconciliation of liberty
+ with peace and order, which the British Empire was struggling to attain
+ along paths in which the Dominion had been the chief pioneer. "In the
+ British Commonwealth of Nations," declared General Smuts, "this transition
+ from the old legalistic idea of political sovereignty based on force to
+ the new social idea of constitutional freedom based on consent, has been
+ gradually evolving for more than a century. And the elements of the future
+ world government, which will no longer rest on the imperial ideas adopted
+ from the Roman law, are already in operation in our Commonwealth of
+ Nations and will rapidly develop in the near future." This may seem an
+ idealistic aim; yet, as Canada's Prime Minister asked a New York audience
+ in 1916, "What great and enduring achievement has the world ever
+ accomplished that was not based on idealism?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the whole period since 1760 the most comprehensive and thorough work
+ is "Canada and its Provinces", edited by A. Shortt and A. G. Doughty, 23
+ vols. (1914). W. Kingsford's "History of Canada", 10 vols. (1887-1898), is
+ badly written but is an ample storehouse of material. The "Chronicles of
+ Canada" series (1914-1916) covers the whole field in a number of popular
+ volumes, of which several are listed below. F. X. Garneau's "Histoire du
+ Canada" (1845-1848; new edition, edited by Hector Garneau, 1913-), the
+ classical French-Canadian record of the development of Canada down to
+ 1840, is able and moderate in tone, though considered by some critics not
+ sufficiently appreciative of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of brief surveys of Canada's history the best are W. L. Grant's "History
+ of Canada" (1914) and H. E. Egerton's "Canada" (1908).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The primary sources are abundant. The Dominion Archives have made a
+ remarkable collection of original official and private papers and of
+ transcripts of documents from London and Paris. See D. W. Parker, "A Guide
+ to the Documents in the Manuscript Room at the Public Archives of Canada"
+ (1914). Many of these documents are calendared in the "Report on Canadian
+ Archives" (1882 to date), and complete reprints, systematically arranged
+ and competently annotated, are being issued by the Archives Branch, of
+ which A. Shortt and A. G. Doughty, "Documents Relating to the
+ Constitutional History of Canada", 1759-1791, and Doughty and McArthur,
+ "Documents Relating to the Constitutional History of Canada", 1791-1818,
+ have already appeared. A useful collection of speeches and dispatches is
+ found in H. E. Egerton and W. L. Grant, "Canadian Constitutional
+ Development" (1907), and W. P. M. Kennedy has edited a somewhat larger
+ collection, "Documents of the Canadian Constitution", 1759-1915 (1918).
+ The later Sessional Papers and Hansards or Parliamentary Debates are
+ easily accessible. Files of the older newspapers, such as the Halifax
+ "Chronicle" (1820 to date, with changes of title), Montreal "Gazette"
+ (1778 to date), Toronto "Globe" (1844 to date), "Manitoba Free Press"
+ (1879 to date), Victoria "Colonist" (1858 to date), are invaluable. "The
+ Dominion Annual Register and Review", ed. by H. J. Morgan, 8 vols.
+ (1879-1887) and "The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs", by John
+ Castell Hopkins (1901 to date), are useful for the periods covered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first chapter, Sir Charles P. Lucas, "A History of Canada",
+ 1765-1812 (1909) and A. G. Bradley, "The Making of Canada" (1908) are the
+ best single volumes. William Wood, "The Father of British Canada"
+ ("Chronicles of Canada", 1916), records Carleton's defense of Canada in
+ the Revolutionary War; and Justin H. Smith's "Our Struggle for the
+ Fourteenth Colony" (1907) is a scholarly and detailed account of the same
+ period from an American standpoint. Victor Con's "The Province of Quebec
+ and the Early American Revolution" (1896), with a review of the same by
+ Adam Shortt in the "Review of Historical Publications Relating to Canada",
+ vol. 1 (University of Toronto, 1897), and C. W. Alvord's "The Mississippi
+ Valley in British Politics", 2 vols. (1917) should be consulted for an
+ interpretation of the Quebec Act. For the general reader, W. S. Wallace's
+ "The United Empire Loyalists" ("Chronicles of Canada", 1914) supersedes
+ the earlier Canadian compilations; C. H. Van Tyne's "The Loyalists in the
+ American Revolution" (1902) and A. C. Flick's "Loyalism in New York during
+ the American Revolution" (1901) embody careful researches by two American
+ scholars. The War of 1812 is most competently treated by William Wood in
+ "The War with the United States" ("Chronicles of Canada", 1915); the naval
+ aspects are sketched in Theodore Roosevelt's "The Naval War of 1812"
+ (1882) and analyzed scientifically in A. T. Mahan's "Sea Power in its
+ Relations to the War of 1812" (1905).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the period, 1815-1841, W. S. Wallace's "The Family Compact"
+ ("Chronicles of Canada", 1915) and A. D. De Celles's "The Patriotes of
+ '37" ("Chronicles of Canada", 1916) are the most concise summaries. J. C.
+ Dent's "The Story of the Upper Canadian Rebellion" (1885) is biased but
+ careful and readable. "William Lyon Mackenzie", by Charles Lindsey,
+ revised by G. G. S. Lindsey (1908), is a sober defense of Mackenzie by his
+ son-in-law and grandson. Robert Christie's "A History of the Late Province
+ of Lower Canada", 6 vols. (1848-1866) preserves much contemporary
+ material. There are few secondary books taking the anti-popular side: T.
+ C. Haliburton's "The Bubbles of Canada" (1839) records Sam Slick's
+ opposition to reform; C. W. Robinson's "Life of Sir John Beverley
+ Robinson" (1904) is a lifeless record of the greatest Compact leader. Lord
+ Durham's "Report on the Affairs of British North America" (1839; available
+ in Methuen reprint, 1902, or with introduction and notes by Sir Charles
+ Lucas, 3 vols., 1912) is indispensable. For the Union period there are
+ several political biographies available. G. M. Wrong's "The Earl of Elgin"
+ (1905), John Lewis's "George Brown" (1906), W. L. Grant's "The Tribune of
+ Nova Scotia" ("Chronicles of Canada", 1915), J. Pope's "Memoirs of the
+ Right Honourable Sir John Alexander Macdonald", 2 vols. (1894), J. Boyd's
+ "Sir George Etienne Cartier" (1914), and O. D. Skelton's "Life and Times
+ of Sir A. T. Galt" (1919), cover the political developments from various
+ angles. A. H. U. Colquhoun's "The Fathers of Confederation" ("Chronicles
+ of Canada", 1916) is a clear and impartial account of the achievement of
+ Confederation; while M. O. Hammond's "Canadian Confederation and its
+ Leaders" (1917) records the service of each of its chief architects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the years since Confederation biographies again give the most
+ accessible record. Sir John S. Willison's "Sir Wilfrid Laurier and the
+ Liberal Party" (1903) is the best political biography yet written in
+ Canada. Sir Richard Cartwright's Reminiscences (1912) reflects that
+ statesman's individual and pungent views of affairs, while Sir Charles
+ Tupper's "Recollections of Sixty Years" (1914) and John Castell Hopkins's
+ "Life and Work of Sir John Thompson" (1895) give a Conservative version of
+ the period. Sir Joseph Pope's "The Day of Sir John Macdonald" ("Chronicles
+ of Canada", 1915), and O. D. Skelton's "The Day of Sir Wilfrid Laurier"
+ ("Chronicles of Canada", 1916) between them cover the whole period
+ briefly. L. J. Burpee's "Sandford Fleming" (1915) is one of the few
+ biographies dealing with industrial as distinct from political leaders.
+ Imperial relations may be studied in G. R. Parkin's "Imperial Federation,
+ the Problem of National Unity" (1892) and in L. Curtis's "The Problem of
+ the Commonwealth" (1916), which advocate imperial federation, and in R.
+ Jebb's "The Britannic Question; a Survey of Alternatives" (1913), J. S.
+ Ewart's "The Kingdom Papers" (1912-), and A. B. Keith's "Imperial Unity
+ and the Dominions" (1916), which criticize that solution from different
+ standpoints. The "Reports" of the Imperial Conferences of 1887, 1894,
+ 1897, 1902, 1907, 1911, 1917, are of much value. Relations with the United
+ States are discussed judiciously in W. A. Dunning's "The British Empire
+ and the United States" (1914). Phases of Canada's recent development other
+ than political are covered best in the volumes of "Canada and its
+ Provinces", a History of the Canadian people and their institutions,
+ edited by A. Shortt and A. G. Doughty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A useful guide to recent books dealing with Canadian history will be found
+ in the annual "Review of Historical Publications Relating to Canada",
+ published by the University of Toronto (1896 to date).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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